This is where you MUST get into the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. You cannot avoid it. You can get
the judges to this point. I did it in an email. Show your judge this post.
If you cant find the Pooling and Servicing Agreement for your case, use the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement next door that you can find on at www.secinfo.com. The provisions of the Pooling and
Servicing Agreement that concern transfer of loans (and servicing, good faith and almost everything
else) are fairly boilerplate and so Pooling and Servicing Agreements are fairly interchangeable for many
purposes. You have to get the Pooling and Servicing Agreement and the mortgage loan purchase
agreement and the hearsay bogus electronic list of loans before the court. You have to educate your
judge about the lack of credibility or effect of the lifeless list of loans as the Uniform Electronic
Transactions Act specifically exempts Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities from its application. Also,
you have to get your judge to understand that the plaintiff has given up the power to accept the transfer
of a note in default and under the conditions presented to the court (out of time, no delivery receipts,
etc). Without the Pooling and Servicing Agreement you cannot do this.
Additionally the Pooling and Servicing Agreement becomes rich when you look at 1-302 (b) which says
that the obligations of good faith, diligence, reasonableness and care prescribed by the code may not be
disclaimed by agreement, but may be enhanced or modified by an agreement which determine the
standards by which the performance of the obligations of good faith, diligence reasonableness and care
are to be measured. These agreed to standards of good faith, etc. are enforceable under the UCC if the
standards are not manifestly unreasonable.
The Pooling and Servicing Agreement also has impact on when or what acts have to occur under the
UCC because 1-302 (c) allows parties to vary the effect of other provisions of the UCC by agreement.
Through the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, it is clear that the plaintiff cannot take an interest of any
kind in the loan by way of an A to D assignment of a mortgage and certainly cannot take an interest in
the note in this fashion.
Without the Pooling and Servicing Agreement and the limitations set up in it by agreement of the
parties, there is no avoiding the mortgage following the note and where the UCC gives over the power
to enforce the note, so goes the power to foreclose on the mortgage.
So, arguing that the Trustee could only sue on the note and not foreclose is not correct analysis without
the Pooling and Servicing Agreement.Likewise, you will not defeat the equitable interest effective as
of assignment arguments without the Pooling and Servicing Agreement and the layering of the laws
that control these securities (true sales required) and REMIC (no defaulted or nonconforming loans and
must be timely bankruptcy remote transfers) and NY trust law and UCC law (as to no ultra vires acts
allowed by trustee and no unaffixed allonges, etc.).
The Pooling and Servicing Agreement is part of the admissible evidence that the court MUST have under
the exacting provisions of the summary judgment rule if the court is to accept any plaintiff affidavit or
assignment.
If you have been successful in your cases thus far without the Pooling and Servicing Agreement, then
you have far to go with your litigation model. It is not just you that has the more considerable task of
proving that New York law applies to this trust and that the Pooling and Servicing Agreement does not
allow the plaintiff to be a nonholder in possession with the rights of a holder.
And I am not impressed by the argument This is clearly something that most foreclosure defense
lawyers are not prepared to do.Get over that quick or get out of this work! Ask yourself, are you
Pooling and Servicing Agreement adverse? If your answer is yes, please get out of this line of work.
Please.
I am not worried about the minds of the Circuit Court Judges unless and until we provide them with the
education they deserve and which is necessary to result in good decisions in these cases.
It is correct that the Pooling and Servicing Agreement does not allow the Trustee to foreclose on the
Note. But you only get there after looking at the Pooling and Servicing Agreement in the context of who
has the power to foreclose under applicable law.
It is not correct that the Trustee has the power or right to sue on the note and Pooling and Servicing
Agreement literacy makes this abundantly clear.
Are you Pooling and Servicing Agreement literate? If not, dont expect your judge to be. But if you want
to become literate, a good place to start is by attending Max Gardners Mortgage Servicing and
Securitization Seminar