Union County v. Merscorp, Inc.

735 F.3d 730, 2013 WL 6017394, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 23038
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 14, 2013
DocketNos. 13-1443, 13-1794
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 735 F.3d 730 (Union County v. Merscorp, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union County v. Merscorp, Inc., 735 F.3d 730, 2013 WL 6017394, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 23038 (7th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiffs, an Illinois county and several of its officials, filed a class action suit in an Illinois state court on behalf of all the counties in the state against the mortgage services company MERSCORP Holdings, Inc., and a number of banks that do business with it. The suit alleges that MER-SCORP is violating an Illinois statute that, the counties (as we’ll call the plaintiffs) contend, requires every mortgage on real property in Illinois to be recorded. The statute specifies that, if it is recorded, it must be recorded in the public-records office of the county in which the property is located. The question is whether, as the counties contend, it must be recorded.

The defendants removed the case to federal district court (basing federal subject-matter jurisdiction on diversity of citizenship) under the Class Action Fairness Act. [732]*732The district judge ruled that Illinois law does not require that mortgages be recorded, and dismissed the suit with prejudice without deciding whether to certify it as a class action.

MERSCORP (we won’t need to discuss the bank defendants) operates an online system called MERS (an acronym for “Mortgage Electronic Registration System”) for tracking mortgage assignments. If a homeowner obtains a mortgage from bank B, B can register the mortgage on MERS and also assign the mortgage to MERSCORP, which then records it in the county in which the mortgaged property is located, in order to provide notice to subsequent purchasers and creditors of the property.

Although MERSCORP is the mortgagee of record, the assignment of a mortgage to it is not substantive. MERSCORP is not the lender; and as it does not pay the assignor for the assignment it does not become the lender — in fact it has zero financial interest in the mortgage. In a previous decision we described MER-SCORP as “a membership organization that records, trades, and forecloses loans on behalf of many lenders, acting for their accounts rather than its own.” Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. v. Estrella, 390 F.3d 522, 524-25 (7th Cir.2004). The purpose'of assigning a mortgage to MERSCORP is merely to enable repeated de facto assignments of the mortgage by successive mortgagees. We call those assignments “de facto” because MERSCORP remains the official assignee (it prefers to be called the “nominee” of the lender and of the lender’s successors and assigns). These “assignments” are not recorded, and so B in our example can transfer the mortgagor’s promissory note — the homeowner’s debt to the bank— to another financial institution without the transfer being recorded in a public-records office. The MERS process thus facilitates, by streamlining, successive interbank sales of mortgages. Often the purpose is to create mortgage-backed securities, which are tradable interests in packages of mortgages and were among the culprits responsible for the financial crisis of 2008.

■ The counties make many criticisms of MERS. One, which is related to the role it played in the market for mortgage-backed securities, is that by facilitating mortgage transfers that are effectively assignments but are not recorded, MERS makes it difficult for a mortgagor to discover who is servicing his mortgage (collecting the monthly interest on it, for example) — a serious problem when the mortgage has been securitized — and whom therefore he should deal with if he wants to renegotiate the mortgage or challenge its validity. He can ask MERSCORP for the information, but the counties contend that MER-SCORP won’t tell him — or can’t because it often loses loan records. One court has called MERSCORP a “straw man,” hiding the identity of the actual mortgage holder by not recording resales of the mortgage. Landmark National Bank v. Kesler, 289 Kan. 528, 216 P.3d 158, 166-68 (2009).

But the counties are not mortgagors complaining that MERSCORP is concealing from them the identity of the holders of the mortgages on their property. The complaint is of an entirely different character. The complainers are county governments and county officials claiming that their counties are entitled to recording fees because Illinois law requires that mortgage transfers by MERSCORP be recorded. They contend that these transfers are really assignments and that all assignments of mortgages on property in Illinois must be recorded.

MERSCORP does not take issue (at least in this case) with the recharacterization of these transfers as assignments. [733]*733It argues, rather, and the district court agreed, that Illinois law does not require that mortgages (whether original or assigned) be recorded. The land recording system exists to provide notice of ownership of real property, or of possession of a lien, such as a mortgage, on such property; recording is not intended to be a source of government income — in effect a tax on assignments or other transfers of mortgages. Recording is optional.

The counties base their claim on section 28 of the Illinois Conveyances Act, which assumed essentially its present form in 1873 (portions of it date back to the 1820s) and is codified as 765 ILCS 5/28 and provides, so far as relates to this case, that

deeds, mortgages, powers of attorney, and other instruments relating to or affecting the' title to real estate in this state, shall be recorded in the county in which such real estate is situated.... No deed, mortgage, assignment of mortgage, or other instrument relating to or affecting the title to real estate in this State may include a provision prohibiting the recording of that instrument....

The counties argue that the statute can mean only that all mortgages and mortgage assignments must be recorded. They harp on what they insist is the “plain meaning” of the language that we’ve quoted. But a moment’s reflection will reveal the shallowness of their recourse to “plain meaning,” a tired, overused legal phrase. For suppose a department store posts the following- notice: “All defective products must be returned to the fifth floor counter for refund.” Obviously this is not a command that defective products be returned; the purchaser is free to keep a defective product, throw it out, or give it as a present to his worst friend. There’s an implicit “if’ in the command: If you want to return a product and get a refund, here’s where you have to return it. Similarly, section 28 of the Conveyances Act may just mean that if you want to record your property interest you must do so in the county in which the property is located. That is not the statute’s “plain meaning” in the sense of an unarguable meaning (though MERSCORP calls it the “plain language” of the statute — and thus we have the unedifying though common spectacle of opposing parties each arguing that its interpretation of statutory or contractual language is unarguable), but in context it’s the better meaning.

Notice the second sentence in section 28, prohibiting the parties to a mortgage or other land instrument from including a “no recordation” condition in the instrument. This sentence (added in to the Conveyances Act in 1995) would be superfluous if the law required recordation, for that requirement would automatically make the inclusion of süch a prohibition in the instrument unlawful.

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Related

Merscorp, Inc. v. Del. Cnty.
207 A.3d 855 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2019)
MERSCORP v. Delaware Co., Aplts.
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Mulkanoor v. Am. Home Mortg. Corp (In re Mulkanoor)
595 B.R. 795 (N.D. Illinois, 2018)
State ex rel. Flaiz v. Merscorp, Inc.
2017 Ohio 7126 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2017)
Marjer, Inc. v. Poplawski, K.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2016
Montgomery County Ex Rel. Becker v. MERSCORP Inc.
795 F.3d 372 (Third Circuit, 2015)
U.S. Bank National Assoc. Feldman, M.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2015
Green Tree Servicing, LLC v. Damron
557 F. App'x 588 (Seventh Circuit, 2014)
Macon County v. Merscorp, Inc.
742 F.3d 711 (Seventh Circuit, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
735 F.3d 730, 2013 WL 6017394, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 23038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-county-v-merscorp-inc-ca7-2013.