Showing posts with label Foreclosure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foreclosure. Show all posts

U.S. Supreme Court holds that Enforcers of Security Interests in Nonjudicial Foreclosures are not “Debt Collectors” under Federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act

By: Stephen D. Richman, Esq. - Senior Counsel- Kohrman, Jackson & Krantz
(A Watch Your Language Series Article)





As established in other “Watch Your Language” articles for this Blog, as a general rule, courts will uphold language in commercial agreements, unless it is contrary to statutory law or public policy. Because of this judicial deference to commercial language, you must “say what you mean, precisely, or a judge will decide what you meant.”

Saying what you mean, precisely, is as important in drafting statutes and ordinances as it is in commercial agreements. As a general rule, courts will also uphold clear and unambiguous statutory language. “Statutes clear in their terms need no interpretation; they simply need application. If the …language of a statute reveals … a meaning which is clear, unequivocal and definite… the statute must be applied accordingly." Provident Bank v. Wood (1973). Alternatively, ambiguous statutes will be interpreted by judges who may or may not uphold the meaning intended by the legislative authority who drafted such statutes.

In the recent case of Obduskey v. McCarthy & Holthus LLP, 138 S. Ct. 2710 (2018), the United States Supreme Court determined that the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (“FDCPA” or the “Act”) was not clear and unequivocal, and accordingly, the court decided what Congress meant by the term “debt collector.”

The facts of the case are simple enough; the law, not so much.

Facts of the Case
In 2007, Dennis Obduskey (the petitioner) bought a home in Colorado with a $329,940 loan secured by a mortgage on the property. Approximately two years later, Mr. Obduskey defaulted on the loan. In 2014, Wells Fargo Bank, N. A., the servicer for the lender hired a law firm, McCarthy & Holthus LLP (the respondent) to act as its agent in carrying out a nonjudicial foreclosure.

McCarthy first mailed Mr. Obduskey a letter that stated McCarthy had been instructed to commence foreclosure against the property, disclosed the amount past due and outstanding on the loan and identified the creditor. Mr. Obduskey responded with a letter disputing the amount of the debt, and requesting written verification of the debt in accordance with §1692g(b) of the FDCPA. McCarthy did not provide any such verification. Instead, the law firm initiated a nonjudicial foreclosure action in accordance with Colorado state law.  

Mr. Obduskey then filed a lawsuit in federal court alleging that the McCarthy law firm had violated the FDCPA by failing to comply with the verification procedure and other provisions and procedures required by the Act. The federal district court dismissed the suit on the ground that the law firm was not a “debt collector” within the meaning of the Act, so the verification procedure and other relevant Act requirements did not apply. On appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit affirmed the dismissal. Mr. Obduskey then petitioned the United States Supreme Court for certiorari (an order by which a higher court reviews a decision of a lower court).

Applicable Law
To better understand the Obduskey decision, a quick primer on nonjudicial foreclosures and the Act is in order.

Nonjudicial foreclosure. As well explained by the court in Obduskey: “When a person buys a home, he or she usually borrows money from a lending institution, such as a bank. The resulting debt is backed up by a ‘mortgage’—a security interest in the property designed to protect the creditor’s investment… The loan likely requires the homeowner to make monthly payments. And if the homeowner defaults, the mortgage entitles the creditor to pursue foreclosure, which is ‘the process in which property securing a mortgage is sold to pay off the loan balance due’… Every state provides some form of judicial foreclosure: a legal action initiated by a creditor in which a court supervises the sale of the property and distribution of the proceeds. These procedures offer various protections for homeowners, such as the right to notice and to protest the amount a creditor says is owed...About half the States also provide for what is known as nonjudicial foreclosure, where notice to the parties and sale of the property occur outside court supervision.” Ohio is not one of the states that permits nonjudicial foreclosures.

The FDCPA- The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act is the main federal law that governs debt collection practices. Generally, the FDCPA prohibits debt collectors from using abusive, unfair or deceptive practices to collect debts. Specifically, the Act imposes a multitude of requirements on “debt collectors.” For example, pursuant to §1692d of the Act, debt collectors may not use or threaten violence, or make repetitive phone calls. Nor (pursuant to §1692e of the Act) can debt collectors make false, deceptive or misleading representations in connection with a debt, like misstating a debt’s “character, amount, or legal status.” And, pursuant to §1692g(b) of the Act, if a consumer disputes the amount of a debt, a debt collector must cease collection until it “obtains verification of the debt” and mails a copy of such verification to the debtor.

There is also a separate subsection of the Act (§1692f(6)), that prohibits a debt collector from: “Taking or threatening to take any nonjudicial action to effect dispossession or disablement of property if— (A) there is no present right to possession of the property . . . ; (B) there is no present intention to take possession of the property; or (C) the property is exempt by law from such dispossession or disablement.”

What is a “debt collector” for purposes of the Act?  Pursuant to §1692a(6) of the Act , a “debt collector” is “any person . . . in any business the principal purpose of which is the collection of any debts, or who regularly collects or attempts to collect, directly or indirectly, debts.” This definition, however, goes on to say that “[f]or the purpose of section 1692f(6)…the term [debt collector] also includes any person . . . in any business the principal purpose of which is the enforcement of security interests.”

The Issue before the Court: The issue faced by the court in Obduskey was essentially; what did Congress mean by enacting, in effect, a two-part definition of “debt collector” in the Act. In other words, does the “2nd part of the definition” (the last sentence) mean that one principally involved in the enforcement of security interests is not a debt collector (except regarding section 1692f(6) of the Act)? If so, numerous other provisions of the Act, like the verification requirement would not apply to the McCarthy law firm. Or, does the 2nd part of the definition simply reinforce the fact that those principally involved in the enforcement of security interests are subject to §1692f(6), in addition to the Act’s other provisions?

Holding/Court Analysis of ObduskeyThe United States Supreme Court in Obduskey held that a security interest enforcer engaged in no more than nonjudicial foreclosure proceedings is not a “debt collector” under the FDCPA, except for the limited purpose of §1692f(6) of the Act. In other words, the vast majority of the Act does not apply to nonjudicial foreclosures.
Most decisive and important to the court was the text of the Act itself. The court interpreted the first part of the Act’s definition of debt collector as the Act’s “primary definition,” and the last sentence of the definition as the “limited purpose” part of the definition. The court in Obduskey then reasoned that if security interest enforcers were meant to be included in the primary definition, there would have been no need for the addition of a limited purpose definition that specifically addresses security interest enforcers (in nonjudicial foreclosures).

As explained in the case syllabus, “The limited purpose definition says that “[f]or the purpose of Section 1692f(6)” a debt collector ‘also includes’ a business, like McCarthy, ‘the principal purpose of which is the enforcement of security interests.’ §1692a(6) (emphasis added). This phrase, particularly the word ‘also,’ strongly suggests that security interest enforcers do not fall within the scope of the primary definition. If they did, the limited purpose definition would be superfluous.”

The court also pointed out that its interpretation is supported by legislative history, which suggests that “the Act’s present language was the product of a compromise between competing versions of the bill, one which would have totally excluded security-interest enforcement from the Act, and another which would have treated it like ordinary debt collection.”

Mr. Obduskey made a number of legal arguments which were summarily dismissed by the court. He also expressed a “floodgates argument” claiming that the court’s decision will open a loophole, permitting creditors and their agents to engage in a host of abusive practices. The court seemed concerned enough about this argument to issue a warning, by stating, “This is not to suggest that pursuing nonjudicial foreclosure is a license to engage in abusive debt collection practices.” However, the Court was not swayed enough to change its decision. In fact, the court countered that it would not be the role of the Supreme Court of the United’s States to curtail any collateral damage from its decision. Rather, “states can…guard against such practices”, and “Congress may choose to expand the reach of the FDCPA.”  According to the court, the United States Supreme Court’s only job is to “enforce the statute that Congress enacted.”

Moral of the Story
For legislators, “say what you mean, precisely, or a judge will decide what you meant.” And, remember that judges do not always get it right.  Even Justice Sotomayor, in her concurring opinion in Obduskey recognized this adage by stating: “this is a close case, and today’s opinion does not prevent Congress from clarifying this statute if we have gotten it wrong.”

For debt collectors, heed the court’s warning (“enforcing a security interest does not grant an actor blanket immunity from the mandates of the Act”), rather than focus on its holding. Also keep in mind that there is no penalty for adhering to consumer protection statutes that may not be applicable, even if you are an attorney or other security interest enforcer involved in a nonjudicial foreclosure. What would be the harm, for example in using the “verification of the debt language” called for in the Act, when there is no requirement to do so? Remember that debt collection protections are also governed at the state and local level, in spite of a limited loophole in the FDCPA.

If you are an enforcer of a security interest in a judicial foreclosure (required in Ohio and other states), note that the holding of Obduskey v. McCarthy & Holthus LLP does not apply to you. As clearly stated by the court in Obduskey, “Whether those who judicially enforce mortgages fall within the scope of the primary definition [of “debt collector”] is a question we can leave for another day…for here we consider nonjudicial foreclosure.” In other words, since enforcers of security interests in judicial foreclosures were not deemed excluded from the Act’s definition of “debt collector”, to be prudent, you should consider yourself included in the definition, and consequently, subject to all provisions of the Act.

New Way for Ohio Homeowners to Spell Relief: “D.O.L.L.A.R.”

(as in Ohio Sub. H.B. 303’s  D.O.L.L.A.R. Deed Program)

By: Stephen D. Richman, Esq.-Senior Counsel, Kohrman, Jackson & Krantz PLL


On September 28, 2016, Ohio Sub.H.B. 303 became effective. Governor John R. Kasich signed the bill into law in June of this year, after unanimous passage in the Ohio House and Ohio Senate.  The most frequently asked questions and answers to the same are as follows:

What does Ohio Sub. H.B. 303 do?

The bill enacts new sections 5315.01, 5315.02, 5315.03, 5315.04, and 5315.05 of the Ohio Revised Code, creating the D.O.L.L.A.R. Deed Program.

 

Who introduced the bill and why?

Republican Reps. Jonathan Dever of Cincinnati and Robert McColley of Napoleon jointly introduced the bill last August. According to Rep. Dever, “This legislation is a small step in helping to keep the American dream of homeownership alive for thousands of Ohioans…As our communities struggle to preserve continuity, this legislation will be a tool to keep our neighborhoods together, kids in school, and bolster our economy.”

 

What is the basic premise of the D.O.L.L.A.R. Deed Program?

The program basically provides homeowners and lenders the option of allowing homeowners to remain in their homes as tenants instead of foreclosing on their property. During the tenancy (up to two years) the former homeowner will have the right to repurchase/refinance its property.

 

What do the letters in the D.O.L.L.A.R. acronym stand for?

The program’s acronym means Deed Over, Lender Leaseback, Agreed Refinance.


Who is eligible to apply?
Any mortgagor who is a resident of his/her home, whose debt to income ratios are below the then current ratios set for the program.

How does the program work?
Once an applicant applies, the lender is not required to participate, but must respond to the homeowner within thirty (30) days. If the lender approves the application, the homeowner and lender enter into a deed in lieu of foreclosure whereby the homeowner deeds title back to the lender, and in return, the lender terminates the foreclosure proceeding and enters into a lease for the property with the homeowner, which lease includes a right of the homeowner to repurchase the property with the lender refinancing the original loan. The homeowner must sign an estoppel affidavit acknowledging, among other things that the original mortgage is not extinguished during the lease term and that the homeowner relinquishes its statutory right to redeem the property outside of the program.

What are the terms of the lease?
Responsibilities of the tenant that are established by Ohio’s Landlord Tenant Act apply. However, statutory repair/maintenance obligations of the landlord do not apply to a lender-landlord under this program. The duration of the lease is the shorter of the period of time necessary for the homeowner to be approved for the new financing (or other FHA mortgage assistance) and two years. Rent cannot be less than monthly taxes, insurance and association or condominium dues.

Where can the full text of the “D.O.L.L.A.R. Deed statute “be found?
See Ohio General Assembly website for the full text of the Statutes: http://search-prod.lis.state.oh.us/solarapi/v1/general_assembly_131/bills/hb303/EN/05?format=pdf


Recent Real Estate Legislation Introduced in the Ohio Legislature

Recent bills of the 131st General Assembly (See https://www.legislature.ohio.gov/) pending in the Ohio House and Ohio Senate related to real property are as follows:

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House Bill 77

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Home improvement contractors-statewide registration  

Long Title: To amend sections 4740.01, 4740.02, 4740.03, 4740.04, 4740.05, 4740.06, 4740.061, 4740.07, 4740.08, 4740.09, 4740.10, 4740.101, 4740.12, 4740.13, 4740.131, 4740.15, 4740.16, and 4740.99 and to enact sections 4740.18, 4740.19, 4740.20, and 4740.21 of the Revised Code to require statewide registration of home improvement contractors, to modify the membership of the Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board, and to make an appropriation.

Primary Sponsor: Representative Bill Patmon

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version


Senate Bill 84

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Landlords-restricting display of U.S. flag/service banners and flags-prohibit  

Long Title: To amend sections 4781.40, 5301.072, and 5311.191 and to enact section 5321.131 of the Revised Code to prohibit manufactured homes park operators, condominium associations, neighborhood associations, and landlords from restricting the display of Ohio flags and blue star banners, gold star banners, and other service flags, and to prohibit manufactured homes park operators and landlords from restricting the display of the United States flag.

Primary Sponsor: Senator Bill Coley

Status: As Passed by the Senate

Legislation Text : View Current Version


Senate Bill 85

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Property tax complaints-initiated by only property owner and county recorder   Long Title: To amend sections 307.699, 3735.67, 5715.19, 5715.27, and 5717.01 of the Revised Code to limit the right to initiate most types of property tax complaints to the property owner and the county recorder of the county in which the property is located.

Primary Sponsor: Senator Bill Coley

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version


 

Senate Bill 96

General Assembly: 131-SB 96

Short Title: Unpaid property taxes-auditor not notified of mortgage satisfaction-waive penalty  

Long Title: To amend section 5715.39 of the Revised Code to waive any penalty due with respect to unpaid property taxes resulting when a mortgage lender fails to notify the county auditor of a satisfied mortgage.

Primary Sponsor: Senator Jim Hughes

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version


Senate Bill 112

General Assembly: 131-SB 112

Short Title: Public buildings-at least one restroom with adult changing station  

Long Title: To amend section 3781.109 of the Revised Code to require public buildings to have at least one rest room facility with an adult changing station.

Primary Sponsor: Senator Peggy Lehner

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version



Senate Bill 113

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Methamphetamine manufacturing lab-remediate underlying real property  

Long Title: To amend sections 3745.13 and 4745.01 and to enact sections 3744.01, 3744.02, 3744.03, 3744.04, 3744.06, 3744.09, 3744.12, 3744.13, 3744.15, 3744.16, 3744.17, 3744.18, 3744.20, and 5302.31 of the Revised Code to provide for the remediation of real property on which an illegal methamphetamine manufacturing laboratory has been discovered.

Primary Sponsor: Senator Frank LaRose, Senator Bill Beagle

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version


 

Senate Bill 122

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Homestead exemption-elderly/disabled homeowners-less than $30,000 income  

Long Title: To amend sections 323.151, 323.152, 323.153, 4503.064, 4503.065, and 4503.066 of the Revised Code to extend eligibility for the homestead exemption to elderly or disabled homeowners who did not receive the exemption for 2013 and have $30,000 or more in Ohio adjusted gross income. 

Primary Sponsor: Senator Lou Gentile

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version


House Bill 126

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Real property-offense of violence on-a nuisance  

Long Title: To amend section 3767.01 of the Revised Code to expand nuisance law to include any real property on which an offense of violence has occurred or is occurring.

Primary Sponsor: Representative Stephanie Kunze, Representative David Leland

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version


House Bill 134

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Mortgage foreclosures-vacant/blighted land-expedite  

Long Title: To amend sections 323.47, 1901.18, 2303.26, 2329.01, 2329.02, 2329.20, 2329.21, 2329.23, 2329.26, 2329.30, 2329.31, 2329.33, 2329.52, and 2909.07 and to enact sections 2308.01 to 2308.04, 2329.211, and 2329.311 of the Revised Code to establish summary actions to foreclose mortgages on vacant and abandoned residential properties and to make other changes relative to residential foreclosure actions.

Primary Sponsor: Representative Cheryl L. Grossman, Representative Michael F. Curtin

Status: As Passed by the House

Legislation Text: View Current Version


Senate Bill 201

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Real property on which violent crime occurs-a nuisance  

Long Title: To amend section 3767.01 of the Revised Code to expand nuisance law to apply to any real property, including vacant land, on which an offense of violence has occurred or is occurring.

Primary Sponsor: Senator Jim Hughes

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version


House Bill 226

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Condominium association liens  

Long Title: To amend sections 5311.18 and 5312.12 of the Revised Code to provide that a portion of a condominium or planned community assessment is prior to other liens on condominium units and planned community lots and to provide that a condominium unit owners’ association lien is a continuing lien.

Primary Sponsor: Representative John M. Rogers

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version



Senate Bill 232

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Transfer on death deeds and affidavits-change law  

Long Title: To amend sections 5302.23 and 5302.24 of the Revised Code to amend the law related to transfer on death designation deeds and affidavits.

Primary Sponsor: Senator Kevin Bacon

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version


Senate Bill 235

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Industrial/commercial development-tax exempt until construction begins  

Long Title: To enact section 5709.45 of the Revised Code to exempt from property tax the increased value of property on which industrial or commercial development is planned until construction of new commercial or industrial facilities at the property commences.

Primary Sponsor: Senator Bill Beagle, Senator Bill Coley

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version



Senate Bill 257

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Recorded real estate instruments-presumed valid  

Long Title: To amend section 5301.07 of the Revised Code to create a presumption of validity of recorded real property instruments, reduce the time period for curing certain defects related to those instruments, and provide constructive notice for those instruments.

Primary Sponsor: Senator Bill Seitz, Senator Michael J. Skindell

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version


 

House Bill 273

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Manufactured home parks-removal of abandoned/unoccupied homes  

Long Title: To amend sections 1923.12, 1923.13, and 1923.14 and to enact section 4781.56 of the Revised Code regarding the removal of abandoned or unoccupied manufactured homes, mobile homes, or recreational vehicles from manufactured home parks.

Primary Sponsor: Representative Dorothy Pelanda

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version

 

HB 306

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Apartments-above second story-separate entrance/immunity  

Long Title: To amend sections 3737.82, 3781.10, 3781.104, and 4740.14 and to enact section 2305.403 of the Revised Code to require a separate, exterior means of egress for dwelling areas above the second story of certain residential rental properties and to provide a qualified immunity to landlords who in good faith comply with the requirement.

Primary Sponsor: Representative Rick Perales

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version

 

HB 327

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Homestead exemption-disabled veterans-extend eligibility  

Long Title: To amend section 323.151 of the Revised Code to extend eligibility for the enhanced disabled veterans homestead exemption to veterans whose disability rating is less than total but who have been judged by the Department of Veterans Affairs as unable to secure or follow a substantially gainful occupation as a result of service-connected disabilities.

Primary Sponsor: Representative Anne Gonzales

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version

 

House Bill 389

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Sexual orientation/gender identity-prohibit discrimination/religious rights  

Long Title: To amend sections 9.03, 124.93, 125.111, 153.59, 153.591, 340.12, 511.03, 717.01, 1501.012, 1751.18, 2927.03, 3113.36, 3301.53, 3304.15, 3304.50, 3314.06, 3332.09, 3721.13, 3905.55, 4111.17, 4112.01, 4112.02, 4112.021, 4112.04, 4112.05, 4112.08, 4117.19, 4735.16, 4735.55, 4757.07, 4758.16, 4765.18, 5104.09, 5107.26, 5123.351, 5126.07, 5165.08, 5515.08, and 5709.832 of the Revised Code to enact the Ohio Fairness Act to prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity or expression, to add mediation to the list of informal methods by which the Ohio Civil Rights Commission may use to induce compliance with Ohio's Civil Rights Law before instituting a formal hearing, and to uphold existing religious exemptions under Ohio Civil Rights Law.

Primary Sponsor: Representative Nickie J. Antonio, Representative Denise Driehaus

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version

 

House Bill 418

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Delinquent tax sale-not if homeowner a senior  

Long Title: To amend section 5721.31 of the Revised Code to enact the "Senior Housing Relief Act" to prohibit the sale of delinquent property tax certificates for homesteads owned for at least 20 years by a person aged 65 or older.

Primary Sponsor: Representative John Barnes, Jr.

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text : View Current Version

 

House Bill 463

General Assembly: 131

Short Title: Foreclosure actions-revise relevant laws 

Long Title: To amend sections 323.47, 1303.16, 1303.38, 2303.26, 2327.01, 2327.02, 2327.04, 2329.01, 2329.151, 2329.17, 2329.18, 2329.19, 2329.20, 2329.21, 2329.26, 2329.271, 2329.28, 2329.30, 2329.31, 2329.33, 2329.34, 2329.39, 2329.45, 2329.52, 2329.56, 2909.07, 5302.01, 5721.371, and 5721.39 and to enact sections 2308.01, 2308.02, 2308.03, 2308.04, 2329.152, 2329.153, 2329.154, 2329.211, 2329.311, 2329.312, 5302.31, 5721.372, and 5721.373 of the Revised Code to establish expedited actions to foreclose mortgages on vacant and abandoned residential properties, to permit private selling officers to conduct judicial and execution sales of real property, to state the intent of the General Assembly regarding mortgage foreclosure actions, to revise the Commercial Paper Law relating to mortgages and lost instruments, and to make other changes relative to foreclosure actions.

Primary Sponsor: Representative Jonathan Dever

Status: As Introduced

Legislation Text: View Current Version