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Illinois App. Court Rules Factual Question Precluded Summary Judgment in HUD/FHA Face-to-Face Challenge

The Appellate Court of Illinois, Second District recently concluded that two borrowers failed to rebut the foreclosing mortgagee’s prima facie case of standing to pursue foreclosure against the borrowers, and affirmed the trial court’s determination that the plaintiff mortgagee established as a matter of law that it had standing.

The Second District, however, reversed the trial court’s order of summary judgment by concluding there were issues of fact as to whether the plaintiff complied with HUD’s face-to-face interview requirement at 24 C.F.R. § 203.604.

As to the standing issue, the Second District held that the plaintiff established a prima facie case of standing by establishing that it possessed the note that was endorsed in blank.  The borrowers offered no substantive evidence to the contrary and they could not rely on circumstantial inferences.

With regard to compliance with section 203.604, the Second District held there were issues of fact as to whether the letter to the borrowers had been “dispatched,” as required under 203.604(d).  Accordingly, the Second District reversed the summary judgment and judgment of foreclosure and sale, and remanded the matter to the trial court to address the issues of fact related to section 203.604.

A copy of the opinion in U.S. Bank Trust National Ass’n v. Hernandez is available at:  Link to Opinion.

On Jan. 2, 2014, the plaintiff mortgagee, the trustee for the asset securitization trust, filed its complaint to foreclose a mortgage on property owned by the borrowers. The plaintiff mortgagee identified the original mortgagee and attached a copy of the subject mortgage. In support of its claim to be the current mortgagee, the plaintiff mortgagee attached a copy of a note. The note bore two indorsements. The first was an indorsement from the original mortgagee to a previous mortgage servicer. The second was a blank indorsement from that mortgage servicer. Neither indorsement was dated.

The borrowers asserted two affirmative defenses.  Their first affirmative defense was that the plaintiff lacked standing because the indorsements on the note were inadequate to show that the plaintiff held the debt when it filed its complaint. The second defense was that the plaintiff failed to comply with section 203.604, which requires for FHA loans that the mortgagee have, or reasonably attempt to have, a face-to-face meeting with the borrowers before seeking foreclosure.

The plaintiff mortgagee subsequently moved for summary judgment, attaching several documents to its motion. First, the mortgagee attached multiple affidavits from a foreclosure supervisor with the current mortgage servicer. The affidavits were all dated in 2015. According to the supervisor, the servicer was currently servicing the borrowers’ loan on behalf of the plaintiff and it had “acquired the servicing rights for [the] loan on 09/16/13.”  The affidavits also stated that, in April 2012, the mortgagee’s agents “visited the subject property” in an attempt to have a face-to-face meeting with the borrowers.

The affidavits also attached a copy of an April 2012 letter addressed to borrowers at the subject property. The sender was the then mortgage servicer. The letter advised the borrowers that a representative from the servicer would attempt to visit the borrowers regarding their loan. The affidavits also attached what was claimed to be “a copy of the FedEx Label for the package in which the letter was sent.”  The label was computer-generated and showed a “ship date” of April 20, 2012.

In addition to the affidavits, the plaintiff attached copies of two assignments of the subject mortgage. The first was an Aug. 15, 2013, assignment from a prior mortgage servicer to the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, and the second assignment was a Jan. 16, 2014, assignment from HUD to the plaintiff.

The borrowers responded to the motion for summary judgment by contending that the August 2013 assignment to HUD raised an issue of material fact whether plaintiff owned the debt on Jan. 2, 2014, when it filed its complaint.

The borrowers also asserted that a genuine question of fact existed as to the plaintiff’s compliance with section 203.604(d) because, according to the mortgagee’s affidavits, the April 2012 letter was sent by Federal Express when section 203.604(d) expressly provides that the letter offering a face-to-face meeting should be sent through the United States Postal Service.

The borrowers attached an affidavit from one of the borrowers who asserted she had never received a certified letter by mail from the plaintiff, or anyone acting on the mortgagee’s behalf, nor had been offered a face-to-face meeting.

The trial court granted summary judgment for the mortgagee, and entered a judgment of foreclosure and sale. The borrowers filed a motion to reconsider, which the trial court denied.

Subsequently, the mortgagee purchased the subject property at a judicial sale and moved the court to approve the sale.  The borrowers filed an objection. They attached documentation showing that the August 2013 assignment of the subject mortgage to HUD was recorded on Jan. 23, 2014, several days after the plaintiff instituted the foreclosure proceeding. The trial court rejected the borrowers’ arguments and entered an order confirming the sale.  The borrowers appealed.

The Second District first addressed the borrowers’ standing defense.  According to the Court, it has been long accepted that possession of the note, indorsed in blank, is sufficient to establish standing absent evidence to the contrary.  And, it was well-settled that attaching a copy of the note to the foreclosure complaint is prima facie evidence the plaintiff owns the note.

The borrowers offered no evidence to support their conclusory arguments.  The Second District first rejected the borrowers’ argument that the plaintiff was required to produce the original note, holding that “[f]or over 25 years, the [Illinois Mortgage] Foreclosure Law has been interpreted as not requiring plaintiffs’ production of the original note, nor any specific documentation demonstrating that it owns the note or the right to foreclose on the mortgage, other than the copy of the mortgage and note attached to the complaint.”

Next, the Appellate Court also rejected the borrowers’ argument that the dates of the mortgage assignments implied the plaintiff did not possess the note at the time the complaint was filed. Specifically, the borrowers alleged that the August 2013 assignment of the subject mortgage to HUD created an issue of fact as to whether the plaintiff could have possessed the mortgage in January 2014 when the complaint was filed.  The mortgagee responded by asserting that the affidavits used in support of the motion for summary judgment established the plaintiff possessed the note when the complaint was filed.

The Second District concluded that the plaintiff’s standing was established as a matter of law, irrespective of what was contained in the affidavits.  The Court noted that the “[borrowers] fail to appreciate the force of the blank indorsement. The presumption of ownership conferred by the indorsement meant that plaintiff could sue on the note without setting forth its history. [Borrowers], rather, had the burden of providing as much of that history as necessary to demonstrate that the transfer of the note did not occur before the complaint was filed.” Because the borrowers had not introduced any evidence to contradict the presumption of ownership, their argument failed.

The Court noted, “[a]ssuming arguendo that the August 15, 2013, assignment conveyed the subject debt to HUD, it simply did not rebut the possibility that plaintiff became the owner of that debt sometime between August 15, 2013, and January 2, 2014, whether from HUD or another entity in the chain of ownership. Even the recording of the August 2013 assignment as late as January 23, 2014, did not rebut plaintiff’s ownership of the debt on January 2nd.”

Finally, the Second District rejected the borrowers’ argument that the Jan. 16, 2014 assignment of mortgage from HUD to the plaintiff created an issue of fact.  “We agree with plaintiff that it is plausibly explained as a memorialization of a prior transfer of the note to plaintiff.”

Turning its attention to the issue of whether the plaintiff mortgagee complied with section 203.604, the Appellate Court concluded there were issues of fact to preclude summary judgment.

As you may recall, section 203.604(b) requires that “[t]he mortgagee must have a face-to-face interview with the mortgagor, or make a reasonable effort to arrange such a meeting, before three full monthly installments due on the mortgage are unpaid.” 24 C.F.R. § 203.604(b).

“A reasonable effort to arrange a face-to-face meeting with the mortgagor” has two elements. 24 C.F.R. § 203.604(d).  First, it “shall consist at a minimum of one letter sent to the mortgagor certified by the Postal Service as having been dispatched.” Second, it “shall also include at least one trip to see the mortgagor at the mortgaged property.”

The borrowers argued that sending the letter via Federal Express, instead of “the Postal Service” failed to comply with the requirements of 203.604(d).  The Appellate Court, however, did not take issue with whether the use of FedEx substantially complied with section 203.604(d).  Instead, the Court concluded that issues of fact existed as to whether the letter was “dispatched,” as required.

The only evidence the plaintiff mortgagee offered in support of sending the letter was a shipping label that included a shipping date and tracking number.  The plaintiff mortgagee did not offer anything to show that the letter was actually sent with the delivery, and the Second District recognized that shipping labels can be created and printed without ever being used.

“In short, a shipping label – complete with shipping date and tracking number – can be generated independently of actual shipment. …The shipping label does not demonstrate conclusively that plaintiff sent [borrowers] a letter offering a face-to-face meeting.”  In the absence of any proof the letter was actually shipped or received, according to the Court, summary judgment was not appropriate.

In addition, the Second District also rejected the plaintiff mortgagee’s argument that noncompliance with section 203.604 may be excused in cases of inevitable foreclosure.  According to the Appellate Court, the only case that had reached that conclusion did so on the basis of an Illinois statute. In the absence of additional support for that argument on a federal regulation, the Court rejected the mortgagee’s argument.

Accordingly, the Second District vacated the summary judgment and remanded the case for further evaluation.

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