U.S. judge finds Wells
Fargo breached 2010 mortgage settlement
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[April 17, 2015]
By Dena Aubin
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wells Fargo Bank
breached a nationwide 2010 legal settlement involving adjustable-payment
mortgages, a federal judge ruled, finding that the bank did not properly
evaluate homeowners who applied for help to avoid foreclosures.
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In an order on Wednesday, U.S. District Court Judge Richard Seeborg
in northern California told Wells to meet with plaintiffs and find a
way to remedy its violations, including steps to let some homeowners
reapply for loan assistance.
Tom Goyda, spokesman for Wells Fargo, the largest U.S. mortgage
lender, said the bank is reviewing the decision and will be working
to provide additional information requested.
"We're quite pleased," said Jeffrey Berns, lead counsel for
homeowners. "I don't know whether this is going to prevent
foreclosures but it is certainly going to open (Wells) up to claims
for damages from class members."
The decision is the latest twist in a long-running dispute over the
settlement, which resolved complaints about "pick-a-payment loans."
Wells inherited a large portfolio of these loans with its 2008
acquisition of Wachovia Corp.
The loans gave borrowers the option to initially pay less than the
interest due, but the escalating payments that came later
contributed to waves of home foreclosures in the 2007-2009 housing
crisis, which threw the country into recession.
Plaintiffs' lawyers for years have argued that Wells was not
complying with its agreement to grant loan modifications potentially
worth up to $2.7 billion to homeowners who took out the loans. The
modifications were an important piece of the settlement, which also
called for Wells to pay $50 million to class members.
In court filings, plaintiffs' lawyers said Wells was not using
proper methods to determine whether homeowners were at imminent risk
of default and thus qualified for assistance under the settlement.
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The lawyers said thousands of homeowners were denied mortgage
assistance because Wells used the wrong methods to gauge their
financial hardships.
In Wednesday's ruling, Seeborg chided both sides, saying they "seem
to have almost no idea what, exactly, they agreed to more than four
years ago."
He concurred with plaintiffs that Wells breached the agreement by
using "evolving and perhaps ill-defined standards" in weighing
applications for loan modifications.
He told both sides to present joint or competing proposals for
correcting the settlement violations within two weeks.
The case is In Re: Wachovia Corp Pick-A-Payment Mortgage Litigation,
U.S. District Court, Northern District of California, No 09-md-2015
(Reporting by Dena Aubin; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Grant
McCool)
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