JOHNSON v. VON ROSENTIEL

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 29, 2023
Docket2:23-cv-04179
StatusUnknown

This text of JOHNSON v. VON ROSENTIEL (JOHNSON v. VON ROSENTIEL) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JOHNSON v. VON ROSENTIEL, (E.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

TARANI-ALIKE JOHNSON : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 23-4179 : MARTHA VON ROSENTIEL, : MARTHA E VON ROSENTIEL, : SHELLEY ROBIN-NEW, : ANNETTE M. RIZZO, : JOSHUA H ROBERTS, : ANNE MARIE B COYLE, : IDEE FOX, : LISETTE SHIRDAN-HARRIS, : ADREA TUOMINEN, : ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE : PENNSYLVANIA COURT FIRST : JUDICIAL DISTRICT (FJD) OF : PENNSYLVANIA COURT OF : COMMON PLEAS OF : PHILADELPHIA COUNTY, : ROCHELLE BILAL, OFFICE OF THE : PHILADELPHIA SHERIFF, : MICHELLE A. HENRY, : PENNSYLVANIA OFFICE OF : ATTORNEY GENERAL, : JOSH SHAPIRO, : OFFICE OF THE PENNSYLVANIA : GOVERNOR, : STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA, : MARCIA L. FUDGE, : U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND : URBAN DEVELOPMENT :

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. December 29, 2023 A bank sued to evict a borrower in October 2023 from a home purchased with the bank’s loan in 2007 following a 2009 default and after the bank first began suing to foreclose on the home in state court in 2010 leading to years of foreclosure litigation in Pennsylvania’s trial and appellate courts. The borrower now subject to eviction is challenging the state court eviction in state court and now is also pro se suing the bank’s lawyer from 2009-2015 and over twenty other persons or governmental bodies here for violating a variety of federal statutes and under Pennsylvania law. Her rambling pro se allegations offer some guidance as to what happened and her multiple admissions in other cases in the public record offer further guidance. We granted her leave to

proceed without paying filing fees requiring we evaluate her claims for merit before imposing service costs upon the taxpayers consistent with our screening obligations set by Congress. We dismiss her federal claims with prejudice as she does not and cannot state a claim under federal law against the named non-immune persons within the statutes of limitations. She also names several judges, elected officials, and public entities but alleges no facts or claims relating to them and most of them are immune. We decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over her state law claims. We dismiss the case with prejudice as to federal claims. I. Alleged pro se facts and matters of public record.

Ms. Johnson signed a promissory note agreeing to repay $392,000 lent to her from World Savings Bank plus interest to buy a home in June 2007.1 She consistently paid approximately $1,439 a month until December 2008.2 The Bank altered terms of the mortgage agreement without Ms. Johnson’s knowledge or consent by changing the cost and risk of loan.3 It refused to disclose material facts of the changed agreement or explain its contents to Ms. Johnson.4 The Bank sold her obligation to the Federal Reserve.5

Martha Von Rosenstiel, an attorney working for a third-party debt collection law firm, Martha Von Rosenstiel, P.C., signed a notice of default letter on her Bank loan and sent it to Ms. Johnson in March 2010.6 Attorney Von Rosenstiel did not act as a verified agent of the Bank when she signed the default letter.7 Ms. Johnson does not plead facts about when she received the letter, but Attorney Von Rosenstiel represented Wells Fargo in 2009 and 2010.8 Wells Fargo files a mortgage foreclosure action in 2010. Wells Fargo notified Ms. Johnson she defaulted on her loan in March 2010.9 Wells Fargo Bank sued Ms. Johnson for mortgage foreclosure in April 2010.10 Attorney Von Rosenstiel filed the case.11 She submitted a signed letter from a Wells Fargo loan officer verifying Ms. Johnson’s

defaulted mortgage.12 Wells Fargo Bank submitted a promissory note without a valid signature to the court.13 Attorney Von Rosenstiel withdrew from representing the Bank in the 2010 foreclosure case in July 2015. Ms. Johnson repeatedly appealed adverse Orders to the Pennsylvania Superior Court.14 She also removed this 2010 foreclosure case to our Court on March 7, 2022; Judge Marston remanded on March 31, 2022.15 The state court eventually found for Wells Fargo in April 2022.16 Wells Fargo files another mortgage foreclosure action in 2017. Wells Fargo sued Ms. Johnson again for mortgage foreclosure in 2017 during the appeals process in the 2010 foreclosure case.17 An attorney from Phelan Hallinan Diamond and Jones LLP

then represented Wells Fargo.18 Attorney Von Rosenstiel did not participate. Ms. Johnson repeatedly appealed orders in state court.19 She also removed this case to our Court, and we remanded it.20 This 2017 foreclosure case appears to be currently listed for trial in state court.21 Wells Fargo forecloses and moves to evict Ms. Johnson. The 2010 foreclosure case eventually led to a foreclosure sale of the property.22 Wells Fargo purchased the property at a foreclosure sale in February 2023.23 Wells Fargo sued Ms. Johnson in Pennsylvania state court seeking to evict her from the property in October 2023.24 Attorneys from Powers Kirn, LLC represent Wells Fargo.25 Attorney Von Rosenstiel and her firm did not participate. Pennsylvania state court judges Honorable Abbe Fletman, Sierra Thomas-Street, Damaris Garcia, and Joshua Roberts presided over the 2023 eviction case against Ms. Johnson.26 Ms. Johnson did not consent to this suit.27 II. Analysis Ms. Johnson seeks $13.5 Million from the Bank’s 2009-2015 lawyer. She also seeks

damages from judges and state and federal agencies and Commonwealth officials based on a variety of challenges to her 2007 mortgage agreement, the 2010 and 2017 foreclosure actions, and the October 2023 eviction case.28 Ms. Johnson raises a variety of claims involving the non-party Bank. Ms. Johnson alleges the promissory note is a security. 29 She alleges the mortgage is invalid since Wells Fargo did not register this promissory note as a security.30 Ms. Johnson concludes the Bank violated the Truth in Lending Act by changing the terms of her mortgage agreement several years ago without her consent.31 Ms. Johnson alleges the Bank breached the mortgage contract, wrongfully foreclosed, and slandered Ms. Johnson’s title and credit when it foreclosed on her home after several years of litigation.32 Ms. Johnson pleads the Bank used a promissory note without a valid signature in the

foreclosure proceedings.33 Ms. Johnson alleges the promissory note is a forgery.34 She then alleges the foreclosure judgment from the 2010 case is invalid because the Bank relied on the forged document.35 Ms. Johnson also pleads the Bank never registered a trust.36 Ms. Johnson also sues the lawyer Attorney Von Rosenstiel representing the Bank from 2009-2015. She alleges Attorney Von Rosenstiel acted as the Bank’s trustee when she signed the notice of default letter in 2010 and sued Ms. Johnson in the 2010 case.37 Ms. Johnson alleges Attorney Von Rosenstiel could not lawfully act as the Bank’s trustee because the Bank did not register the mortgage as a trust.38 Ms. Johnson alleges Attorney Von Rosenstiel and her firm used false or misleading practices in 2009-2015 prohibited by Congress in the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act through prohibited collection methods.39 Ms. Johnson also pleads Attorney Von Rosenstiel misrepresented herself as an attorney in the 2010 foreclosure case and earlier default letter.40 Ms. Johnson argues Attorney Von Rosenstiel violated her due process rights and the ban on false or misleading practices under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.41

Ms. Johnson then alleges judges, the Commonwealth, Commonwealth officials, and federal and state agencies violated federal law. Judge Shelley Robins-New lacked the authority to open the 2010 foreclosure case.42 Ms. Johnson alleges Judge Robins-New is a fiduciary to the Bank because she presided in the case.43 She alleges Judge Robins-New’s fiduciary duty disqualifies her from the case, invalidates the foreclosure decision, and subjects the state court judge to federal judicial discipline.44 Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
JOHNSON v. VON ROSENTIEL, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-von-rosentiel-paed-2023.