New York Judge Denies Foreclosure Based on Alleged Predatory Lending
ABC News
By JIM AVILA, BETH TRIBOLET, LAUREN PEARLE and SCOTT MICHELS
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David and Karen Shearon decided to buy their first house so they could
give their three children stability and security. It seemed easy:
Though they made less than $30,000, the couple was able to put nothing
down on a $335,000 house in Staten Island, N.Y.
But within a year, facing rising interest rates and loan payments that
were much higher than what they said they were promised, a process
server was banging on their door.
"He was trying to make us more embarrassed by screaming it out
at the top of his lungs and banging on our door and going, 'The
Shearons are in foreclosure! They're in foreclosure!'" David Shearon
told ABC News.
But unlike many of the thousands of American families who are
on the verge of losing their homes, the Shearons fought back -- and so
far appear to be winning.
A New York state trial court judge in February found that the
bank that is trying to foreclose on their house violated the state's
predatory lending laws. In what lawyers in the case say is the first
ruling of its kind in New York, Judge Joseph Maltese denied the bank's
bid for foreclosure and ruled that the Shearons may be entitled to a
refund of their mortgage payments and attorneys fees.
The case "gave the judge … reason to pause and consider in the
current climate what is going on here, not just with these borrowers
but with the industry in general," said Noah Pusey, the Shearons'
attorney.
Lasalle Bank attorney Tom Solferino said no predatory lending
took place and blamed Maltese for misapplying the law. "There's such a
thing as predatory borrowing going on," he said. "There are people
going out and buying property with no cash down, not making any payment
and then pointing the finger at the people who lent them the money."
Maltese has agreed to rehear arguments about his decision to stop the foreclosure, and LaSalle Bank has also appealed.
But among all the talk of subprime mortgages and predatory
lending, the Shearons are the uncommon example of consumers who were
able to beat the lenders, at least so far. In several states, home
buyers are beginning to successfully fight off foreclosure in court.
"There are some people who are clearly victims of fraud, and judges are
reacting differently," said James Tierney, Maine's former attorney
general and the director of the National State Attorneys General
Program at Columbia Law School, who was not familiar with the Shearons'
case. "In the meantime, people are losing their homes. A number of
judges are saying, fraud is fraud, and we're not going to let this
proceed."
When the Shearons bought their house in 2005, they say their
mortgage broker told them they would qualify for a fixed interest loan.
But at closing, they say they were presented with a high-interest,
subprime loan package and balloon interest payments up to 14 percent.
"It was day and night compared to what we asked for, and we had good credit at the time," Shearon said.
But they felt they couldn't back out. The Shearons said they
were told they would lose their $5,000 deposit and could be sued if
they did not go through with the agreement. And they had already given
up their old apartment.
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"I feel that I was bullied into accepting the way it was," said David Shearon.
Though the couple made less than $30,000, they borrowed $355,000
for the $335,000 house. The extra money went to pay mortgage costs and
fees -- a violation of the state's banking laws, which allow a maximum
of 3 percent of a loan to go to paying down fees, according to Maltese.
Maltese also ruled that it was the bank's responsibility to
verify that the Shearons were able to repay the loans, even though
their bank application said they earned more than they really did,
according to the opinion.
Housing law experts say courts nationwide are going to have to
face more litigation over predatory lending as more Americans lose
their homes.
"Now that we have more awareness of all the abuses that there
were in this market, there's closer scrutiny to what was going on,"
said Jessica Attie, a lawyer with South Brooklyn Legal Services who
counsels homeowners threatened with foreclosure. "So it's not a
hopeless battle, it's maybe a David and Goliath battle.... We are
fighting banks that have a lot more resources than us, but what's
happened has been so egregious in so many cases that the battle, it can
be won in some cases."
As for the Shearons, they say they are hopeful they can win.
"You have to fight," said Karen Shearon. "You can't just lie down."
Legal experts say there are a number of ways to keep a lender at
bay. In an interview with ABC News, Attie offered a few pieces of
advice for people faced with foreclosure.
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