Learn more about foreclosures. Holding securties like a stock cannot convert into a mortgage and then a home. Get the Facts! Mail to: M.Soliman expert.witness@live.com Ask about our services
Feb 3, 2010
Usedkarguy, on January 14th, 2010 at 8:59 am Said:
Anonymous: This is the defense that John (oliver@ipa) has mentioned. This is exactly the point I would like to make to a federal judge instead of a county/state court judge (If I am allowed)via appeal. My trust was all Wells Fargo except for the Securities Underwriter (read buyer and reseller)CitiGroup Global Markets, which took a $62BILLION writedown.
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TRUSTEES DEED UPON SALE
1) the grantee herein was the foreclosing beneficiary.
2) The amount of the unpaid debt was..... $2,020,589.63
3) The amount paid by the grantee was ....$1,096,500.00
4) The documentary transfer tax is .......... $0
Item 1) states the parties bringing the foreclosure are in possession of the rights of a holder in due course and selling to themselves the property. We will show this not to be the case.
Item 2) can they verify the balance and how the breakdown of interest and fees are distributed? It is likely the numbers do not add and constitute grounds to rescind the sale.
Item 3) how can the lender, who sold the loan into a bulk pooled asset and for due consideration upon which it has lost its rights to the asset, bring a foreclosure? It cannot! Only by first repurchasing the asset is the party foreclosing in a position first. Loans sold that were securitized into a closed end fund for which many layers of stock certificates were issued is an indication foreclosure is an impossible proposition.
What stands out to me most of all is a claim of bid rigging and manipulation of a trustees sale for which a borrowers right to tender is removed. Where the trustee’s deed transfers by credit bid, the tender of the full debt is not appropriate.
Credit bids are distinguished from purchase money bids. California Civil Code 2924h (b) provides: (b) At the trustee’s sale the trustee shall have the right (1) to require every bidder to show evidence of the bidder’s ability to deposit with the trustee the full amount of his or her final bid in cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code
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