SHERIFF SALES STOPPED TO DATE

I was keeping track of the number of Sheriff's Sales stopped, but I decided that this gave the wrong impression to viewers. An attorney should not be consulted as a matter of last resort. Instead an attorney should be consulted early in the process and the sooner an attorney is consulted the more likely a Homeowner will have a favorable result















The Law Office of Bruce M. Broyles







2670 North Columbus Street, Suite L, Lancaster, Ohio 43130







Phone: (740) 277-7850 / (330) 965-1093







bruce@brucebroyleslaw.com











The Ohio Rules of Professional Conduct suggest that the reader be informed that one of the purposes of this blog is to attract potential clients, and therefore should be considered attorney advertisement











Friday, April 20, 2018

Ohio Business Records

Usually, I try to provide some tidbit of knowledge relating to the defense of foreclosures.  I currently have a number of cases that have gone to trial or are being prepared for trial.  The Ohio Business records exception to hearsay has come up rather frequently.  I have challenged the admission of these business records on the following grounds:
1.  The witness is not properly qualified under the rule.  Here, I argue that the only job of the witness is to travel the country and be a witness at trial.  The witness has only recently reviewed the file and knows little about the actual workings of any department.

2.  The records are from other similar servicing companies and Plaintiff has not questioned or reviewed any of these records.

3.  The records are from untrustworthy sources based upon Billion dollar settlements and fines.

4.  The records are not "business records".  Plaintiff obtained an interest in the loan only to file a foreclosure action.  Plaintiff has never used or relied upon any record to make a business decision.  This is especially true when the employer of the witness obtained an interest in the loan shortly before the complaint was filed or after the complaint was filed.

While the business records exception is applicable to all Ohio civil litigation, it comes up in almost every foreclosure cases.  
Evid.R. 803(6), states:
(6) Records of regularly conducted activity. A memorandum, report, record, or data compilation, in any form, of acts, events, or conditions, made at or near the time by, or from information transmitted by, a person with knowledge, if kept in the course of a regularly conducted business activity, and if it was the regular practice of that business activity to make the memorandum, report, record, or data compilation, all as shown by the testimony of the custodian or other qualified witness or as provided by Rule 901(B)(10), unless the source of information or the method or circumstances of preparation indicate lack of trustworthiness. The term “business” as used in this paragraph includes business, institution, association, profession, occupation, and calling of every kind, whether or not conducted for profit.

Plaintiff in a foreclosure case either through an affidavit of an employee or through the testimony of an employee at trial will present a statement of an employee that rotely repeats the language of Evidence Rule 803.  However, the witness does not work in that office or department.  Instead, the employee is hired to travel around the country providing testimony in foreclosure cases.  The witness will become familiar with the account records of the defendant by reviewing a file shortly before trial.  Not what the evidence rule intended.

The witness will state that he/she is familiar with the business practices of plaintiff; that the records were made at or near the time of the event, by a person with knowledge, and that it was the regular business practice to make such records.  However, the witness never worked for the company that produced the records, never performed the record making, and never relied upon the records.

The witness will be employed by a company that had the rights to collect the debt transferred to it moments before the complaint was filed, or even during the litigation.  The witness will discuss how the records are reviewed for any missing or abnormal item in the business records of the previous company.  If an abnormality in the business records is found, the company that now owns the debt will contact the company that previously owned the debt, and the missing information or document is provided.  This process is known as "boarding" and if the witness can describe the process in any detail, the business records are allowed in as evidence.

Defendant can challenge the Plaintiff's witness on the records, the record keeping process, and the record boarding process, but any inability of the witness will be overlooked because to be admissible the record does not have to be produced by the witness and the witness does not need first hand knowledge of the events recorded.

Defendant can also challenge the Plaintiff's source of the records as being untrustworthy.  There is very little case law on what constitutes an untrustworthy source.

The rationale behind Evid.R. 803(6) is that if information is sufficiently trustworthy that a business is willing to rely on it in making business decisions, the courts should be willing to as well. See Staff Note to Evid.R. 803(6).
Deutsche Bank Nat’l Trust Co. v. Hansen (Ohio App. 5th Dist.), 2011-Ohio-1223, at 21.

This is how I would imagine the evidence rules were intended to apply to a foreclosure.  The local bank would call the bookkeeper who had custody of the account records.  The bookkeeper did not input every single notation in the account record of defendant homeowner, but the bookkeeper knew the tellers, has seen the defendant homeowner making payments, and had actually trained one or more of the individuals putting the notations in the records of defendant homeowner.  The records before the witness are copies but she made the copies earlier in the week so that the official records did not need to leave the bank.  Finally, she could rely upon the business records because no homeowner ever doubted the records, and the records were used by the bank to decide if it was going to extend any more credit to the defendant homeowner.

Today, the Plaintiff is either a multinational corporation or a trust which possesses thousands of loans.  The local bank does not keep the local account.  Instead, the loan is packaged and sold so many times that an industry as developed just to keep track of all the transactions (MERS).  The loans are sold, or the servicing rights are sold by the thousands.  Each loan would be expected to have many pages of loan documents, payments, payment histories, telephone call logs, telephone conversation transcripts, demand letters, and field visits.  Many thousands of page of information have been transferred several times during the life of the loan.  Each time each loan is transferred, the new servicer "boards" or reviews each paper of each loan.

Typically, as a homeowner becomes in default, the servicing rights are transferred several more times, as the value of the non-performing loan is less.  Then as the loan is about to be foreclosed there is a whirlwind of activity to make certain that all the transfers of the loan are documented.  The business entities that are buying and selling these loans and are reviewing all the papers regarding the loans, do not have the time or money to make certain that the transfers are properly documented until right before the complaint is filed.

The Plaintiff and the plaintiff's servicer's employee now come into court and state that Plaintiff has relied upon the business records to make business decisions.  Plaintiff states that it can rely upon the business records from these other financial institutions.  The financial records of these other financial institutions should not be considered untrustworthy.  The financial institutions have had allegations of bad practices, but those claims of bad acts have been settled to avoid the cost of litigation.  These other financial institutions have not admitted liability, they have simply paid BILLIONS to settle claims regarding their business practices.  


Friday, April 6, 2018

My New Office

My Office has moved.  My office is now located at 2670 North Columbus Street, Suite L in Lancaster, Ohio 43130.  My telephone number is (740) 277-7850.  My previous number (330) 965-1093 should eventually remotely access and transfer to my new location.  There has been a delay in the process and my (330) 965-1093 telephone number does not answer while the two providers discuss an issue with "porting".  I apologize for the inconvenience. 

My email remains the same brucec@brucebroyleslaw.com; and my website is still located at brucebroyleslaw.com.


Monday, February 19, 2018

MY OFFICE IS MOVING

I have not posted a blog in quite sometime, so the first thing I wanted to do was to let people know that I am moving my office to the Central Ohio area.  I am originally from Lancaster, Ohio and I will be relocating to be closer to my family and my wife's family.  Very little else will change.

I will still practice in the Eastern portion of Ohio, with cases from Lake County to Scioto County.  I will still be readily available by phone and email.  I will meet with clients when they desire a face to face meeting, but as my current clients already know most things can be accomplished over the telephone or through email.

An Update on Defending Foreclosures

Despite the national media finding a new economic crisis to focus on, many people are still struggling with keeping their house or saving their house from foreclosure.  Many of the same tactics are being used.  Homeowners are suddenly three months behind when a new servicer takes over the loan.  Homeowners are still encouraged to stop making payments while a loan modification is being worked out.  Even though HAMP is no longer an ongoing government program, HUD Regulations are more often incorporated into the promissory notes and mortgages, and Regulation X provides all mortgagees (homeowners) with certain protections while working out a loan modification.  In addition, as the loans have been transferred repeatedly, many of the lenders are becoming much more willing to waive late fees, and accrued interest.  Loan modifications are actually somewhat helpful instead of simply delaying the inevitable.

While promising changes are occurring in modifications, trial courts have become more favorable settings for homeowners.  Many of the arguments remain the same, but Homeowners are having greater success in avoiding summary judgment and getting to trial.  At trial some of the weaknesses of the Plaintiff's case become more apparent.  

There is still no free home.  (The wisdom of the kingdom was reduced to a single phrase: No free Lunch.). However, a dismissal based upon the failure to comply with conditions precedent should not simply result in the Bank starting over.  Instead, if the bank improperly accelerated the loan balance and then refused to accept payments, then the bank should be liable for the arrearages; the accrued interest, and late fees under RESPA.  This will result in what most homeowners are seeking: going back to the point before all the problems started.