In Re Rivera

342 B.R. 435, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 946, 2006 WL 1516014
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedMay 25, 2006
Docket15-30621
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 342 B.R. 435 (In Re Rivera) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Rivera, 342 B.R. 435, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 946, 2006 WL 1516014 (N.J. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

MORRIS STERN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The court, sua sponte, ordered a secured party and its counsel to explain certain anomalies related to the execution of certifications, including a certification which would support stay relief to allow foreclosure to proceed against Jenny Rivera’s residence in Lodi, New Jersey. These parties were to show cause why sanctions should not be imposed if the court’s suspicions were to be borne out. In fact, the court’s inquiry has exposed a long-standing and regularized practice of creating documents purported to be “certifications”; however, presigned forms were kept on file by counsel and simply, in case after case, attached to the body of data-laden mortgage default accountings, the composite being filed with the court as if they were certifications.

It is now clear that the respondent law firm, Shapiro & Diaz, LLP (“S & D”), had for an extended period engaged in the practice of preparing certifications in support of bankruptcy stay relief motions and applications, knowingly attaching pre-signed statements of certification. The actual signatories to the “on-file” forms were in many instances not the client-providers of the information contained in the certifications as submitted, nor did those signatories (whether or not the information providers) actually review the final form of the certifications before the documents were filed with this court. In fact, in the immediate matter which sparked the *439 court’s interest, the “signatory” (one “Ami-rah Shahied”) had not been in the employ of anyone related to the client-secured party for over a year before the certification was filed. Moreover, in that period when no relevant client relationship existed with Amirah Shahied, her warehoused statement of certification was appended to the tail end of accountings of default in mortgage payments and filed with this court by S & D approximately 250 times,

S & D is part of a national network of law firms owned or controlled by two Illinois attorneys, Gerald M. Shapiro and David Kreisman. Shapiro and Kreisman had, until June or so of 2004, operated a mortgage loan default outsourcing service (“LOGS Financial Services, Inc.”), which interfaced with either mortgage holders or other servicers to process real estate foreclosures and related bankruptcy matters. (LOGS sold its business to “FANDO” 1 in or about June 2004.) Thus, in many instances S & D and other network law firms actually received (and continue to receive) data for foreclosure and bankruptcy motions or applications from such post-default servicers, 2 rather than from mortgagees or primary mortgage loan servi-cers.

The accounting data from mortgagees’ books and records is fundamental to any of their demands for post-default remedies. Secured parties must program their bookkeeping machinery to account accurately for the complexity of home mortgage variables, including not only periodic payments by mortgagors, but also such items as changes in interest rates where applicable, escrow balances, adjusted e.g., for real estate tax and casualty insurance premium payments, and allowable charges for fees and costs. Adding to the mixture is the now routine wholesale transfer of mortgage “paper,” bundled as collateral for large debt security issues. National enterprises have developed to service mortgage holders’ needs, these servicers often operating in tandem or tiers with subservicers such as FANDO, now specializing in post-default processing. The ostensible “mortgagee” thus changes its identity (sometimes frequently, depending on shifting service arrangements), while mortgagors remain obligated to make periodic payments. Default in payment implicates the foreclosure process, which in turn sets in motion the mortgagor-debtor’s efforts to save the homestead, often by seeking recourse to Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code. 3 Chapter 13 plans propose to satisfy mortgage arrears (paid to a standing trustee “within” the plan), while the debtor is required to make regular post-petition mortgage payments (generally paid to the secured party directly, i.e., “outside” the plan).

Accounting for post-petition mortgage payments then becomes another layer in secured parties’ programming matrices. Debtors, obviously hard-pressed financially and frequently disorganized in their bookkeeping, undertake plan payments which *440 could stretch out for up to sixty months. Post-petition (indeed, often after Chapter 13 plan confirmation) defaults are bound to develop. Bargains are then struck which give the debtors yet another chance to save their homes, though default provisions are “tightened.” The frequently used “cure” order grants a secured party the right to future stay relief on an ex ;parte (but noticed) application of counsel, accompanied by a certification accounting for the latest default. 4 The required “certification,” in form and nomenclature, is derived from the New Jersey practice (see New Jersey Rules of Court l:4-4(b)), “Certifications in Lieu of Oath,” and is the equivalent of the 28 U.S.C. § 1746 “Un-sworn Declaration.”

Of course, at any point in Chapter 13 cases disputes can arise between secured parties and debtors over mortgage payments — frequently with debtors swearing payments were made and secured parties swearing payments were not received. Disputes centering on post-petition payment histories are particularly nettlesome. These payment histories — detailing not simply the “regular” mortgage payment credits but also adjusting for direct cure payments and frequently bargained for add-ons to plan payments (plan payments thus including the initial prepetition arrears amount plus the later-accruing post-petition arrears), as well as escrow and other suspense account accounting — are often the bane of a bankruptcy judge’s *441 existence on a busy “Chapter 13 day.” Anyone who has experienced such accounting conflicts knows the hell of bookkeeping intricacies.

From the court’s perspective, the stay relief process involves a high volume of motions and applications, is fast paced, and is best managed by an electronic filing system which has come of age in bankruptcy. Yet, notwithstanding the volume, pace and electronic systemizing of stay relief motions and applications, this court must remain mindful of the serious stakes— most often it is the family homestead that is in jeopardy. 5 Mortgage funding markets should not be roiled by unreasonable impediments to post-default remedies. However, both the data supplied and the verification processes employed by those who would foreclose on residences must be above reproach.

In the immediate case (and in many cases participated in by S & D, FANDO and its predecessor, LOGS, and other mortgage holders and servicers), there were serious flaws in those processes.

Ms. Rivera’s Chapter 13 Case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
342 B.R. 435, 2006 Bankr. LEXIS 946, 2006 WL 1516014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rivera-njb-2006.