City of St. Clair Shores General Employees Retirement System v. Lender Processing Services, Inc. et al
Filing
41
AMENDED COMPLAINT against Jeffrey S. Carbiener, Francis K. Chan, Lee A. Kennedy, Lender Processing Services, Inc., Michelle Kersch with Jury Demand filed by Baltimore County Employees Retirement System. (Attachments: # 1 Appendix Index of Exhibits, # 2 Exhibit A, # 3 Exhibit B, # 4 Exhibit C, # 5 Exhibit D, # 6 Exhibit E, # 7 Exhibit F, # 8 Exhibit G, # 9 Exhibit H, # 10 Exhibit I, # 11 Exhibit J, # 12 Exhibit K, # 13 Exhibit L, # 14 Exhibit M)(Reise, Jack)
EXHIBIT L
Interagency Review
of Foreclosure Policies
and Practices
Federal Reserve System
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
Office of Thrift Supervision
Washington, D.C. • April 2011
Interagency Review
of Foreclosure Policies
and Practices
Federal Reserve System
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
Office of Thrift Supervision
Washington, D.C. • April 2011
i
Contents
Executive Summary ................................................................................................................. 1
Review Scope and Objectives ............................................................................................. 1
Summary of Review Findings .............................................................................................. 2
Summary of Supervisory Response ................................................................................... 4
Part 1: Background and Risks Associated
with Weak Foreclosure Process and Controls ................................................................. 5
Impact on Borrowers ............................................................................................................. 5
Impact on the Industry and Investors ................................................................................. 6
Impact on the Judicial Process ........................................................................................... 6
Impact on the Mortgage Market and Communities ......................................................... 6
Part 2: Review Findings
......................................................................................................... 7
Foreclosure Process Governance ....................................................................................... 7
Organizational Structure and Availability of Staffing ........................................................ 8
Affidavit and Notarization Practices ................................................................................... 8
Documentation Practices ..................................................................................................... 8
Third-party Vendor Management ........................................................................................ 9
Arrangements with Outside Law Firms ..................................................................................... 9
Arrangements with Default Management Service Providers (DMSPs) ........................................ 10
Arrangements with Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. .......................................... 10
Ineffective Quality Control (QC) and Audit ....................................................................... 11
Part 3: Supervisory Response
............................................................................................. 13
Part 4: Industry Reforms ...................................................................................................... 15
Governance and Oversight ................................................................................................. 15
Organizational Structure, Staffing, and Technology ....................................................... 15
Accountability and Responsiveness Dealing with Consumers .................................... 15
Executive Summary
The Federal Reserve System, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and the Office of
Thrift Supervision (OTS), referred to as the agencies,
conducted on-site reviews of foreclosure processing
at 14 federally regulated mortgage servicers during
the fourth quarter of 2010.1
This report provides a summary of the review findings and an overview of the potential impacts associated with instances of foreclosure-processing weaknesses that occurred industrywide. In addition, this
report discusses the supervisory response made public simultaneous with the issuance of this report, as
well as expectations going forward to address the
cited deficiencies. The supervisory measures
employed by the agencies are intended to ensure safe
and sound mortgage-servicing and foreclosureprocessing business practices are implemented. The
report also provides an overview of how national
standards for mortgage servicing can help address
specific industrywide weaknesses identified during
these reviews.
Review Scope and Objectives
The primary objective of each review was to evaluate
the adequacy of controls and governance over ser1
Agencies conducted foreclosure-processing reviews at Ally Bank/
GMAC, Aurora Bank, Bank of America, Citibank, EverBank,
HSBC, JPMorgan Chase, MetLife, OneWest, PNC, Sovereign
Bank, SunTrust, U.S. Bank, and Wells Fargo. The reviews
included mortgage-servicing activities conducted by insured
banks and thrifts, as well as by several nonbank affiliates of
these organizations. The 14 servicers were selected based on the
concentration of their mortgage-servicing and foreclosureprocessing activities. The agencies typically do not disclose
examinations or examination findings regarding particular institutions. In light of the formal enforcement actions entered into
by these 14 servicers, which are being made public, the agencies
have determined that it is appropriate to identify the servicers
(whether a bank or a bank affiliate) that were reviewed. The
bank and thrift holding company parents of Ally Bank/GMAC,
Bank of America, Citibank, Everbank, HSBC, JPMorgan
Chase, MetLife, OneWest, PNC, SunTrust, U.S. Bank, and
Wells Fargo also entered into formal enforcement actions.
vicers’ foreclosure processes and assess servicers’
authority to foreclose. The reviews focused on issues
related to foreclosure-processing functions. While the
reviews uncovered significant problems in foreclosure
processing at the servicers included in the report,
examiners reviewed a relatively small number of files
from among the volumes of foreclosures processed
by the servicers. Therefore, the reviews could not provide a reliable estimate of the number of foreclosures
that should not have proceeded. The agencies, therefore, are requiring each servicer to retain an independent firm to conduct a thorough review of foreclosure actions that were pending at any time from January 1, 2009, through December 31, 2010, to, among
other things, 1) identify borrowers that have been
financially harmed by deficiencies identified in the
independent review and 2) provide remediation to
those borrowers where appropriate. These independent reviews will be subject to supervisory oversight
to ensure that the reviews are comprehensive and the
results are reliable.
For the reviews discussed in this report, examiners
evaluated each servicer’s self-assessments of their
foreclosure policies and processes; assessed each servicer’s foreclosure operating procedures and controls;
interviewed servicer staff involved in the preparation
of foreclosure documents; and reviewed, collectively
for all servicers, approximately 2,800 borrower foreclosure files that were in various stages of the foreclosure process between January 1, 2009, and December 31, 2010.2
Examiners focused on foreclosure policies and procedures; quality control and audits; organizational
structure and staffing; and vendor management,
2
Foreclosure files at each servicer were selected from the population of in-process and completed foreclosures during 2010. The
foreclosure file sample at each servicer included foreclosures
from both judicial states and nonjudicial states. Review teams
independently selected foreclosure file samples based on preestablished criteria (such as files for which consumer complaints
had been raised, or those in geographic areas with high volumes
of foreclosures) with the balance of the files selected based on
examiner judgment.
2
April 2011
including use of third-party vendors such as foreclosure attorneys, Lender Processing Services (LPS) and
other default-service providers, and MERSCORP
and its wholly owned subsidiary, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS). Based on
their reviews of the limited number of foreclosure-file
samples, examiners also assessed the accuracy of
foreclosure-related documentation, including note
endorsements and the assignments of mortgages and
deeds of trust, and loan document control.3 With
respect to those files, examiners also assessed whether
fees charged in connection with the foreclosures
exceeded the amounts reflected in the servicers’ internal records. In addition, the Federal Reserve and the
OCC solicited views from consumer groups to help
detect problems at specific servicers, and the Federal
Reserve expanded the file sample to include borrowers who were delinquent, but not yet in foreclosure.
The file reviews did not include a complete analysis
of the payment history of each loan prior to foreclosure or potential mortgage-servicing issues outside of
the foreclosure process. Accordingly, examiners may
not have uncovered cases of misapplied payments or
unreasonable fees, particularly when these actions
occurred prior to the default that led to the foreclosure action. The foreclosure-file reviews also may not
have uncovered certain facts related to the processing
of a foreclosure that would lead an examiner to conclude that a foreclosure otherwise should not have
proceeded, such as undocumented communications
between a servicer employee and the borrower in
which the employee told the borrower he or she had
to be delinquent on the loan to qualify for a modification. In addition, the reviews did not focus on
loan-modification processes, but when reviewing
individual foreclosure files, examiners checked for
evidence that servicers were in contact with borrowers and had considered alternative loss-mitigation
efforts, including loan modifications.
To ensure consistency in the reviews, the agencies
used standardized work programs to guide the
assessment and to document findings pertaining to
each servicer’s corporate governance process and the
individual foreclosure-file reviews. The work programs were organized into the following categories:
‰ Policies and procedures. Examiners reviewed the
servicers’ policies and procedures to see if they
3
For purposes of this report, default management services generally include administrative support and services provided to the
servicers by third-party vendors to manage and perform the
tasks associated with foreclosures.
provided adequate controls over the foreclosure
process and whether those policies and procedures
were sufficient for compliance with applicable laws
and regulations.
‰ Organizational structure and staffing. Examiners
reviewed the functional unit(s) responsible for foreclosure processes, including their staffing levels,
their staff’s qualifications, and their training
programs.
‰ Management of third-party service providers.
Examiners reviewed the servicers’ oversight of key
third parties used throughout the foreclosure process, with a focus on foreclosure attorneys, MERS,
and default-service providers such as LPS.
‰ Quality control and internal audits. Examiners
assessed quality-control processes in foreclosures.
Examiners also reviewed internal and external
audit reports, including government-sponsored
enterprise (GSE) and investor audits and reviews
of foreclosure activities as well as servicers’
self-assessments.
‰ Compliance with applicable laws. Examiners
checked the adequacy of the governance, audits,
and controls that servicers had in place to ensure
compliance with applicable laws.
‰ Loss mitigation. Examiners determined if servicers
were in direct communication with borrowers and
whether loss-mitigation actions, including loan
modifications, were considered as alternatives to
foreclosure.
‰ Critical documents. Examiners evaluated servicers’
control over critical documents in the foreclosure
process, including the safeguarding of original
loan documentation. Examiners also determined
whether critical foreclosure documents were in the
foreclosure files that they reviewed, and whether
notes were endorsed and mortgages assigned.
‰ Risk management. Examiners assessed whether
servicers appropriately identified financial, reputational, and legal risks and whether these risks were
communicated to the board of directors and
senior management of the servicer.
Summary of Review Findings
The reviews found critical weaknesses in servicers’
foreclosure governance processes, foreclosure document preparation processes, and oversight and monitoring of third-party vendors, including foreclosure
attorneys. While it is important to note that findings
Executive Summary
varied across institutions, the weaknesses at each servicer, individually or collectively, resulted in unsafe
and unsound practices and violations of applicable
federal and state law and requirements.4 The results
elevated the agencies’ concern that widespread risks
may be presented—to consumers, communities, various market participants, and the overall mortgage
market. The servicers included in this review represent more than two-thirds of the servicing market.
Thus, the agencies consider problems cited within
this report to have widespread consequences for the
national housing market and borrowers.
Based on the deficiencies identified in these reviews
and the risks of additional issues as a result of weak
controls and processes, the agencies at this time are
taking formal enforcement actions against each of
the 14 servicers subject to this review to address those
weaknesses and risks. The enforcement actions
require each servicer, among other things, to conduct
a more complete review of certain aspects of foreclosure actions that occurred between January 1, 2009,
and December 31, 2010. The specific supervisory
responses are summarized in Part 3 of this report.
The loan-file reviews showed that borrowers subject
to foreclosure in the reviewed files were seriously
delinquent on their loans. As previously stated, the
reviews conducted by the agencies should not be
viewed as an analysis of the entire lifecycle of the
borrowers’ loans or potential mortgage-servicing
issues outside of the foreclosure process. The reviews
also showed that servicers possessed original notes
and mortgages and, therefore, had sufficient documentation available to demonstrate authority to foreclose. Further, examiners found evidence that servicers generally attempted to contact distressed borrowers prior to initiating the foreclosure process to
pursue loss-mitigation alternatives, including loan
modifications. However, examiners did note cases in
which foreclosures should not have proceeded due to
an intervening event or condition, such as the borrower (a) was covered by the Servicemembers Civil
Relief Act, (b) filed for bankruptcy shortly before the
foreclosure action, or (c) qualified for or was paying
in accordance with a trial modification.5
The interagency reviews identified significant weaknesses in several areas.
4
5
This report captures only the significant issues found across the
servicers reviewed, not necessarily findings at each servicer.
Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, 50 USC App. sections. 501–
596, Public Law 108-189.
3
‰ Foreclosure process governance. Foreclosure governance processes of the servicers were underdeveloped and insufficient to manage and control
operational, compliance, legal, and reputational
risk associated with an increasing volume of foreclosures. Weaknesses included:
‰ inadequate policies, procedures, and independent control infrastructure covering all aspects
of the foreclosure process;
‰ inadequate monitoring and controls to oversee
foreclosure activities conducted on behalf of
servicers by external law firms or other thirdparty vendors;
‰ lack of sufficient audit trails to show how information set out in the affidavits (amount of
indebtedness, fees, penalties, etc.) was linked to
the servicers’ internal records at the time the
affidavits were executed;
‰ inadequate quality control and audit reviews to
ensure compliance with legal requirements, policies and procedures, as well as the maintenance
of sound operating environments; and
‰ inadequate identification of financial, reputational, and legal risks, and absence of internal
communication about those risks among boards
of directors and senior management.
‰ Organizational structure and availability of staffing. Examiners found inadequate organization and
staffing of foreclosure units to address the
increased volumes of foreclosures.
‰ Affidavit and notarization practices. Individuals
who signed foreclosure affidavits often did not personally check the documents for accuracy or possess the level of knowledge of the information that
they attested to in those affidavits. In addition,
some foreclosure documents indicated they were
executed under oath, when no oath was administered. Examiners also found that the majority of
the servicers had improper notary practices which
failed to conform to state legal requirements.
These determinations were based primarily on servicers’ self-assessments of their foreclosure processes and examiners’ interviews of servicer staff
involved in the preparation of foreclosure
documents.
‰ Documentation practices. Examiners found some—
but not widespread—errors between actual fees
charged and what the servicers’ internal records
indicated, with servicers undercharging fees as frequently as overcharging them. The dollar amount
4
April 2011
of overcharged fees as compared with the servicers’ internal records was generally small.
‰ Third-party vendor management. Examiners generally found adequate evidence of physical control
and possession of original notes and mortgages.
Examiners also found, with limited exceptions,
that notes appeared to be properly endorsed and
mortgages and deeds of trust appeared properly
assigned.6 The review did find that, in some cases,
the third-party law firms hired by the servicers
were nonetheless filing mortgage foreclosure complaints or lost-note affidavits even though proper
documentation existed.
‰ Quality control (QC) and audit. Examiners found
weaknesses in quality control and internal auditing
procedures at all servicers included in the review.
Summary of Supervisory Response
The agencies recognize that a number of supervisory
actions and industry reforms are required to address
these weaknesses in a way that will hold servicers
accountable for establishing necessary governance
and controls. Measures that the servicers are being
required to implement are designed to ensure compliance with applicable laws, promote foreclosure processing in a safe and sound manner, and establish
responsible business practices that provide accountability and appropriate treatment to borrowers.
6
The agencies expect federally regulated servicers to have the necessary policies and procedures in place to ensure that notes are
properly endorsed and mortgages are properly assigned, so that
ownership can be determined at the time of foreclosure. Where
federally regulated servicers serve as document custodians for
themselves or other investors, the agencies require controls and
tracking systems to properly safeguard the physical security and
maintenance of critical loan documents.
At this time, the agencies are taking formal enforcement action against each of the 14 servicers and parent bank holding companies because the deficiencies
and weaknesses identified during the reviews represent unsafe or unsound practices and violations of
applicable law. The foreclosure-file reviews showed
that borrowers in the sampled pool were seriously
delinquent. The reviews also showed that the appropriate party brought the foreclosure action. However,
a limited number of mortgages should not have proceeded to foreclosure because of an intervening event
or condition. Nevertheless, the weaknesses in servicers’ foreclosure processes, as confirmed by the
reviews, present significant risk to the safety and
soundness of mortgage activities. The failures and
deficiencies identified as part of the reviews must be
remedied swiftly and comprehensively.
The agencies will continue to assess and monitor corrective actions and will address servicers’ failures to
correct identified deficiencies where necessary.
Going forward, servicers must develop and demonstrate effective risk management of servicing operations to prevent a recurrence of deficiencies cited in
this report. The agencies are currently engaged in an
effort to establish national mortgage-servicing standards to promote the safe and sound operation of
mortgage-servicing and foreclosure processing,
including standards for accountability and responsiveness to borrower concerns. Such an effort will
include engaging the Government Sponsored Enterprises, private investors, consumer groups, the servicing industry, and other regulators. Part 4 of this
report provides a general overview of the core principles that should be included in future national
mortgage-servicing standards.
Part 1: Background and Risks Associated
with Weak Foreclosure Process and Controls
Mortgage servicing plays a central role in the management of mortgage loans from origination to final
disposition. The mortgage servicer is the intermediary between borrowers and their lenders. When the
borrower is paying as agreed, the servicer’s duties are
ministerial: collecting payments, distributing payments to investors, managing cash and administering
funds in escrow, and reporting to investors. When a
loan is in default, the demands on the servicer necessarily expand, requiring additional resources and
much more sophisticated risk management. A necessary consequence of the growth in foreclosures since
2007 is increased demands on servicers’ foreclosure
processes.
The residential mortgage-servicing market is highly
concentrated among a few servicers. The five largest
mortgage servicers by activity volume—included
among the 14 servicers subject to the reviews
addressed in this report—account for 60 percent of
the industry’s total servicing volume.7 The 14 servicers included in the interagency review collectively
represent more than two-thirds of the servicing
industry (see figure 1), or nearly 36.7 million
mortgages.8
At the end of the fourth quarter of 2010, nearly
54 million first-lien mortgage loans were outstanding, 2.4 million of which were at some point in the
foreclosure process. Additionally, two million mortgages were 90 or more days past due and at an
elevated risk of foreclosure. New foreclosures are on
pace to approach 2.5 million by the end of 2011. In
light of the number of foreclosures and continued
weakness in overall mortgage performance, the agencies are concerned that the deficiencies in foreclosure
7
8
The five largest mortgage servicers in order are Bank of
America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, Citibank, and Ally
Bank/GMAC.
Federal Reserve staff estimates 54 million first-lien mortgages
outstanding as of December 31, 2010.
Figure 1. Concentration of the mortgage-servicing Industry
68%
14 examined servicers
All other servicers
32%
Source: Federal Reserve staff estimates of the concentration of servicing volume,
based on data from Inside Mortgage Finance.
processing observed among these major servicers
may have widespread consequences for the housing
market and borrowers.
Impact on Borrowers
Weaknesses in foreclosure processes and controls
present the risk of foreclosing with inaccurate documentation, or foreclosing when another intervening
circumstance should intercede. Even if a foreclosure
action can be completed properly, deficiencies can
result (and have resulted) in violations of state foreclosure laws designed to protect consumers. Such
weaknesses may also result in inaccurate fees and
charges assessed against the borrower or property,
which may make it more difficult for borrowers to
bring their loans current. In addition, borrowers can
find their loss-mitigation options curtailed because of
dual-track processes that result in foreclosures even
when a borrower has been approved for a loan modification. The risks presented by weaknesses in foreclosure processes are more acute when those processes are aimed at speed and quantity instead of
quality and accuracy.
6
April 2011
Impact on the Industry and Investors
Weaknesses in foreclosure processes pose a variety of
risks to the financial services industry and investors.
These risks extend beyond the financial cost of remedying procedural errors and re-filing affidavits and
other foreclosure documents. Servicers may also bear
legal costs related to disputes over note ownership or
authority to foreclose, and to allegations of procedural violations through the use of inaccurate affidavits and improper notarizations. Servicers may be
subject to claims by investors as a result of delays or
other damages caused by the weaknesses. Furthermore, concerns about the prevalence of irregularities
in the documentation of ownership may cause uncertainty for investors of securitized mortgages. Servicers and their affiliates also face significant reputational risk with their borrowers, with the court system, and with regulators.
Impact on the Judicial Process
Weaknesses in foreclosure processes have resulted in
increased demands on judicial resources to resolve a
variety of foreclosure-related matters, including note
ownership. In addition, courts rely extensively on
affidavits (usually affidavits of indebtedness) submitted by servicers to decide foreclosure actions on a
summary basis without requiring in-person testimony.9 If such affidavits were not properly prepared
or executed, courts may lose confidence in the reliability of the affidavits as persuasive evidence filed
on behalf of servicers.10
9
10
The basic affidavit of indebtedness typically sets forth the name
of the party that owns the loan, the default status, and the
amounts due for principal, interest, penalties (such as late
charges), and fees. This affidavit is frequently the principal basis
upon which a court is permitted to order a foreclosure without
requiring in-person testimony. Similar documentation may be
required in bankruptcy proceedings.
Mortgage foreclosures occur under either a judicial or a nonjudicial process. Judicial foreclosures are court-supervised and
require the lender to bring a court action to foreclose. Nonjudicial foreclosures (also known as “power of sale”) involve little or
Impact on the Mortgage Market and
Communities
Weaknesses in foreclosure processes led several servicers to slow, halt, or suspend foreclosure proceedings in late 2010, and, in many cases, re-file foreclosure documents. Delays in foreclosure processing,
which averaged 450 days in the fourth quarter of
2010, slow the clearing of excess inventory of foreclosed properties and lead to extended periods of
depressed home prices.11 Such delays also impede the
efficient disposition of foreclosed homes and the
clearing of seriously delinquent mortgages, particularly in geographic regions with greater concentrations of vacant and abandoned properties. This outcome acts as an impediment for communities working to stabilize local neighborhoods and housing
markets.12
Moreover, local property values may be adversely
affected if foreclosed homes remain vacant for
extended periods, particularly if such homes are not
properly maintained.13 Widely publicized weaknesses
in foreclosure processes also adversely affect home
buyer and investor confidence. Assuring robust and
credible remedial programs for mortgage servicers so
that foreclosure processes can operate and markets
can clear without impediments or interventions contributes to attaining a stable national housing market.
11
12
13
no court oversight and generally are governed by state statutes.
Even foreclosures that are instituted outside the judicial process
can be challenged in court, however, and then become subject to
court actions.
See Lender Processing Services Applied Analytics (December 2010, www.lpsvcs.com/RiskMgmt). Current time frames to
move a property to foreclosure sale have increased from an average of 250 days in first quarter 2008 to 450 days by fourth quarter 2010.
Industry data show approximately four million properties currently listed that have been foreclosed in the past few years. See
Mortgage Bankers Association, National Delinquency Survey,
(November 18, 2010, www.mbaa.org/NewsandMedia/
PressCenter/74733.htm).
Campbell, John Y., Stefano Giglio and Parag Pathak (July 2010)
Forced Sales and House PricesManuscript, Harvard University
Department of Economics (kuznets.fas.harvard.edu/~campbell/
papers/forcedsales072410.pdf).
Part 2: Review Findings
The reviews found critical weaknesses in foreclosure
governance processes, foreclosure document preparation processes, and oversight and monitoring of
third-party law firms and other vendors. These weaknesses involve unsafe and unsound practices and violations of applicable federal and state laws and
requirements, and they have had an adverse effect on
the functioning of the mortgage markets. By emphasizing speed and cost efficiency over quality and
accuracy, examined servicers fostered an operational
environment contrary to safe and sound banking
practices.
In connection with the reviews of sampled files and
assessments of servicers’ custodial activities, examiners found that borrowers whose files were reviewed
were seriously delinquent on their mortgage payments at the time of foreclosure and that servicers
generally had sufficient documentation available to
demonstrate authority to foreclose on those borrowers’ mortgages.14 Nevertheless, examiners noted
instances where documentation in the foreclosure file
alone may not have been sufficient to prove ownership of the note at the time the foreclosure action
commenced without reference to additional information. When additional information was requested and
provided to examiners, it generally was sufficient to
determine ownership.
In addition, review of the foreclosure files showed
that servicers were in contact with the delinquent
borrowers and had considered loss-mitigation alternatives, including loan modifications. Examiners also
noted a small number of foreclosure sales, however,
that should not have proceeded because of an inter14
As previously noted, examiners were limited to the documents
in the foreclosure files. Those documents may not have disclosed certain facts that might have led examiners to conclude
that a foreclosure should not have proceeded, such as misapplication of payments that could have precipitated a foreclosure
action or oral communications between the borrower and servicer staff that were not documented in the foreclosure file.
vening event or condition, such as the borrower:
(a) was covered by the Servicemembers Civil Relief
Act, (b) filed bankruptcy shortly before the foreclosure action, or (c) was approved for a trial
modification.
A summary of the major findings identified during
the reviews is set forth below.
Foreclosure Process Governance
Examiners found governance at each examined servicer in need of substantial improvement, and often
cited the absence of sound controls and ineffective
management of foreclosure processes. Foreclosure
policies and procedures at many of the servicers were
either weak or needed substantial expansion to provide effective guidance, control, and ongoing monitoring. As noted above, examiners concluded that the
majority of servicers reviewed had inadequate affidavit and notary-signing processes that did not ensure
proper attestation (or verification) of the underlying
documents.
Examiners found that most servicers had inadequate
staffing levels and training programs throughout the
foreclosure-processing function and that a large percentage of the staff lacked sufficient training in their
positions. The reviews also revealed that all of the
servicers relied heavily on outsourcing arrangements
with outside counsel and other third-party vendors
to carry out foreclosure processes without adequate
oversight of those arrangements. Some servicers
failed to enter into contracts with the foreclosure law
firms performing critical steps in the foreclosure process, including affidavit- and notary-preparation and
signing processes. Audit and quality-assurance controls and self-assessment reviews at all of the examined servicers lacked comprehensiveness and failed to
identify specific weaknesses and process gaps. Details
on these areas of weakness are included below.
8
April 2011
Organizational Structure and
Availability of Staffing
At the time of the review, a majority of the servicers
had inadequate staffing levels or had recently added
staff with limited servicing experience. In most
instances, servicers maintained insufficient staff to
appropriately review documents for accuracy, and
provided inadequate training for affidavit signers,
notaries, and quality-control staff. Examiners also
noted weak controls, undue emphasis on quantitative
production and timelines, and inadequate workload
monitoring.
Affidavit and Notarization Practices
Deficiencies in servicers’ processes, procedures, controls, and staffing resulted in numerous inaccurate
affidavits and other foreclosure-related documents.
Examiners found that most servicers had affidavit
signing protocols that expedited the processes for
signing foreclosure affidavits without ensuring that
the individuals who signed the affidavits personally
conducted the review or possessed the level of knowledge of the information that they attested to in those
affidavits. Examiners confirmed these deficiencies
through interviews with individuals who signed documents, as well as through a review of servicers’ selfassessments. Examiners also found the majority of
the servicers had improper notary practices that
failed to conform to state legal requirements. Examiners noted some servicers failed to maintain an accurate list of approved and acceptable notaries that
individuals signing documents did not do so in the
presence of a notary when required, and that documents often were executed in a manner contrary to
the notary’s acknowledgement and verification of
those documents. In addition, some foreclosure
documents indicated they were executed under oath
when no oath was administered. Again, examiners
confirmed these deficiencies by interviewing notaries
and reviewing servicers’ self-assessments.
At the examined servicers, anywhere from 100 to
more than 25,000 foreclosure actions occurred per
month between January 1, 2009, and December 31,
2010, with the quantity depending upon the size of
the servicer’s operations. It was common to find an
insufficient number of staff assigned to review, sign,
and notarize affidavits. At some of the servicers,
examiners found that insufficient staff—or the lack
of specified guidance to staff or external law firms on
affidavit completion—contributed to the preparation
and filing of inaccurate affidavits. In the sample of
foreclosure files reviewed, examiners compared the
accuracy of the amounts listed on affidavits of
indebtedness to the documentation in the paper foreclosure file or computerized loan servicing systems.
Although borrowers whose foreclosure files were
reviewed were seriously in default at the time of the
foreclosure action, some servicers failed to accurately
complete or validate itemized amounts owed by those
borrowers. At those servicers, this failure resulted in
differences between the figures in the affidavit and
the information in the servicing system or paper file.
In nearly half of those instances, the differences—
which were typically less than $500—were adverse to
the borrower. While the error rates varied among the
servicers, the percentage of errors at some servicers
raises significant concerns regarding those servicers’
internal controls governing foreclosure-related
documentation.
Documentation Practices
During the foreclosure-file reviews, examiners compared the accuracy of amounts listed on the servicers’ affidavits of indebtedness with documentation
on file or maintained within the electronic servicing
system of record. For most of the servicers, examiners cited the lack of a clear auditable trail in reconciling foreclosure filings to source systems of record. In
some cases, examiners directed servicers to further
audit foreclosure filings to verify the accuracy of
information and compliance with legal requirements.
Likewise, in connection with the file review, examiners also determined whether critical foreclosure documents were in the foreclosure files, and whether notes
appeared properly endorsed and mortgages appeared
properly assigned. Examiners noted instances where
documentation in the foreclosure file alone may not
have been sufficient to prove authority to foreclose
without reference to additional information.15 When
more information was requested and provided, it
generally was sufficient to determine authority. With
some exceptions, examiners found that notes
appeared properly endorsed, and mortgages
appeared properly assigned.16 Examiners also trav15
16
Servicers frequently maintained custody of original mortgage
documents, although in some cases third-party trustees or custodians held original documents. Custodians are entrusted to
manage the original documents that establish note ownership,
and, when necessary, produce the original documents for a foreclosure action.
Only in rare instances were custodians unable to produce origi-
Part 2: Review Findings
eled to servicers’ document repository locations to
assess custodial activities. Examiners found that servicers generally had possession and control over critical loan documents such as the promissory notes and
mortgages. The review did find that, in some cases
prior to 2010, the third-party law firms hired by the
servicers were nonetheless filing lost-note affidavits
or mortgage foreclosure complaints in which they
claimed that the mortgage note had either been lost
or destroyed, even though proper documentation
existed.
Third-party Vendor Management
The agencies found that the servicers reviewed generally did not properly structure, carefully conduct, or
prudently manage their third-party vendor relationships with outside law firms and other third-party
foreclosure services providers. Failure to effectively
manage third-party vendors resulted in increased
reputational, legal, and financial risks to the
servicers.
Arrangements with Outside Law Firms
Servicers typically used third-party law firms to prepare affidavits and other legal documents, to file
complaints and other pleadings with courts, and to
litigate on their behalf in connection with foreclosure
and foreclosure-related bankruptcy proceedings. The
servicers reviewed generally showed insufficient guidance, policies, or procedures governing the initial
selection, management, or termination of the law
firms that handled their foreclosures. Many servicers,
rather than conducting their own due diligence, relied
on the fact that certain firms had been designated as
approved or accepted by investors. Servicers often
did not govern their relationships with these law
firms by formal contracts. Instead, servicers frequently relied on informal engagements with law
firms, at times relying on investors’ business relationships with the law firms or the law firms’ contractual
relationships with default management service
providers.
Inadequate Oversight
Servicers also did not provide adequate oversight of
third-party vendor law firms, including monitoring
for compliance with the servicers’ standards. Several
nal loan documentation, and in those instances the servicers
generally were able to provide adequate explanations, including
that copies in the possession of the custodian were acceptable
under applicable law.
9
servicers exempted third-party law firms from the
servicers’ vendor management programs or did not
identify them as third-party vendors subject to those
programs. In some cases, servicers assumed that
investors performed such oversight, in which case
oversight was limited to ensuring that the law firms
were on the investors’ lists of approved or accepted
providers. Where monitoring of law firms was conducted, it was often limited to things such as responsiveness and timeliness, checking for liability insurance, or determining if any power of attorney given
to the firm remained valid rather than assessing the
accuracy and adequacy of legal documents or compliance with state law or designated fee schedules.
Document Retention Weaknesses
Examiners also found that the servicers did not
always retain originals or copies of the documents
maintained by the third-party law firms that conducted their foreclosures. Instead, the servicers relied
on the firms to maintain those documents. The
absence of central and well-organized foreclosure
files by the servicers and the consequent need for the
examiners to collect foreclosure documentation
derived from numerous sources made it difficult at
times for examiners to conduct full foreclosure-file
reviews while on-site.
Inadequate guidance, policies, procedures, and
contracts
In addition, examiners generally found an absence of
formal guidance, policies, or procedures governing
the selection, ongoing management, and termination
of law firms used to handle foreclosures. This deficiency resulted in a lack of clarity regarding roles,
responsibilities, and performance parameters. Examiners also observed an absence of written contracts
between certain servicers and law firms, which left
those servicers with no contractual recourse for liability against the firms for performance issues. These
deficiencies, coupled with the overall lack of
adequate oversight, contributed to instances in which
servicers and law firms failed to identify problems
with the firms’ foreclosure practices, thereby exposing the servicers to a variety of significant risks.
Those problems include instances in which law firms
signed documents on behalf of servicers without having the authority to do so, or they changed the format and content of affidavits without the knowledge
of the servicers. These defects could, depending upon
the circumstances, raise concerns regarding the legality and propriety of the foreclosure even if the ser-
10
April 2011
vicer had sufficient documentation available to demonstrate authority to foreclose.
Arrangements with Default Management
Service Providers (DMSPs)
In connection with the on-site reviews of servicers,
the agencies also conducted an on-site review of
Lender Processing Services, Inc. (LPS), which provides significant services to support mortgageservicing and foreclosure processing across the industry. The review of LPS involved a number of issues
that are similar to those raised in the reviews of the
servicers, and the LPS review covered issues that are
unique to the operations, structure and corporate
governance of LPS. During the review of LPS, the
agencies found deficient practices related primarily to
the document execution services that LPS, through
its DocX, LLC, and LPS Default Solutions, Inc. subsidiaries had provided to servicers in connection with
foreclosures. To address these issues, the agencies are
taking formal enforcement action against LPS under
section 7(d) of the Bank Service Company Act, 12
USC § 1867(d), and section 8(b) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act, 12 USC § 1818(b).
Inadequate Contracts
During the review of servicers, examiners assessed
servicers’ relationships with third-party vendor
DMSPs, focusing primarily on DMSPs that supported the execution of foreclosure-related documents, such as affidavits of indebtedness, lost-note
affidavits, and assignments of mortgages.17 Examiners found that contracts between the servicers and
DMSPs generally were inadequate, often omitting
significant matters such as service-level agreements.
Contracts did not provide for an appropriate level of
oversight of third-party vendor law firms in situations where the servicers relied on the DMSPs to
conduct such oversight.
Inadequate Oversight
Examiners also observed that servicers generally
demonstrated an overall lack of adequate oversight
of DMSPs. At times, the servicers failed to identify
DMSPs as vendors subject to the servicers’ vendor
management programs and demonstrated an inability to provide the examiners with sufficient evidence
of due diligence. Examiners found no evidence that
servicers conducted audits of the document execution operations of their DMSPs.
17
Not all of the servicers engaged the services of third-party
vendor DMSPs to perform document execution services.
The lack of sufficient oversight of DMSPs, coupled
with the contractual deficiencies, led to instances in
which employees of those DMSPs signed foreclosure
affidavits without personally conducting the review
or possessing the level of knowledge of information
that they attested to in those affidavits. Employees of
DMSPs, like the employees of the servicers themselves, executed documents in a manner contrary to
the notary’s acknowledgement and verification of
those documents. In addition, in limited instances,
employees of DMSPs signed foreclosure-related
documents on behalf of servicers without proper
authority. Because some of the servicers relied on
DMSPs to oversee their third-party vendor law
firms, the contractual deficiencies and lack of oversight of DMSPs contributed to the weaknesses identified above regarding the oversight of third-party
vendor law firms.
Arrangements with Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems, Inc.
In connection with the on-site reviews of servicers,
the agencies, together with the Federal Housing
Finance Agency (FHFA), also conducted an on-site
review of MERSCORP and its wholly owned subsidiary, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.
(collectively, MERS), which, as detailed below, provides significant services to support mortgageservicing and foreclosure processing across the industry. The review of MERS involved a number of
issues that are similar to those raised in the reviews of
the servicers, and the MERS review covered issues
that are unique to the operations, structure and corporate governance of MERS. During the review of
MERS, the agencies and FHFA found significant
weaknesses in, among other things, oversight, management supervision and corporate governance. To
address these issues, the agencies, together with
FHFA, are taking formal enforcement action against
MERS under section 7(d) of the Bank Service Company Act, 12 USC § 1867(d), and section 8(b) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 USC § 1818(b).
MERS streamlines the mortgage recording and
assignment process in two ways. First, it operates a
centralized computer database or registry of mortgages that tracks the servicing rights and the beneficial ownership of the mortgage note. Each mortgage
registered in the database is assigned a Mortgage
Identification Number (MIN). Second, MERS can
be designated by a member (and its subsequent
assignees) to serve in a nominee capacity as the mortgagee of record in public land records. Designating
Part 2: Review Findings
MERS as the mortgagee is intended to eliminate the
need to prepare and record successive assignments of
mortgages each time ownership of a mortgage is
transferred. Rather, changes in beneficial ownership
of the mortgage note (and servicing rights) are
tracked in the MERS registry using the MIN.18 All
of the examined servicers had relationships with
MERS.
Inadequate Oversight
Servicers exercised varying levels of oversight of the
MERS relationship, but none to a sufficient degree.
Several of the servicers did not include MERS in
their vendor management programs. In these
instances, the servicers failed to conduct appropriate
due diligence assessments and failed to monitor,
evaluate, and appropriately manage the MERS contractual relationship. Deficiencies included failure to
assess the internal control processes at MERS, failure
to ensure the accuracy of servicing transfers, and failure to ensure that servicers’ records matched MERS’
records.
Inadequate Quality Control
Examiners also determined that servicers’ qualitycontrol processes pertaining to MERS were insufficient. In some cases, servicers lacked any qualityassurance processes and relied instead on the infrequent and limited audits that MERS periodically
conducted. Other deficiencies included the failure to
conduct audit reviews to independently verify the
adequacy of and adherence to quality-assurance processes by MERS, and the need for more frequent and
complete reconciliation between the servicers’ systems and the MERS registry. Several servicers did
not include MERS activities in the scope of their
audit coverage.
Ineffective Quality Control (QC) and
Audit
Examiners found weaknesses in quality-control procedures at all servicers, which resulted in servicers not
18
While MERS maintains a registry of the beneficial ownership
of the mortgage note, this registry is not a system of legal
record. The ownership of the note is determined by the Uniform Commercial Code, and, if a change in ownership of a note
is not recorded in MERS or is recorded incorrectly, the transfer
is still valid.
11
performing one or more of the following functions at
a satisfactory level:
‰ ensuring accurate foreclosure documentation,
including documentation pertaining to the fees
assessed;
‰ incorporating mortgage-servicing activities into
the servicers’ loan-level monitoring, testing, and
validation programs;
‰ evaluating and testing compliance with applicable
laws and regulations, court orders, pooling and
servicing agreements, and similar contractual
arrangements; and
‰ ensuring proper controls to prevent foreclosures
when intervening events or conditions occur that
warrant stopping the foreclosure process (e.g.,
bankruptcy proceedings, applicability of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, or adherence to a
trial or permanent loan modification program).
Examiners also found weaknesses in internal auditing
procedures at all the servicers included in the review.
When performed, the few internal audits conducted
by servicers failed to identify fundamental control
issues that led to the foreclosure process breakdowns.
Failures to perform internal audits effectively resulted
in servicers’ inability to identify, address, and internally communicate foreclosure-processing risks. The
failures to identify and communicate these risks
resulted in servicers not strengthening the quality of
risk-management processes to a level consistent with
the nature, increasing size, and complexity of the servicer’s foreclosure activities. Moreover, failure to conduct comprehensive audits to identify weaknesses in
foreclosure processes resulted in servicers not taking
sufficient corrective action to strengthen policy and
procedural gaps, increase staffing levels, and improve
training in response to sharply rising foreclosure volumes prior to the agencies’ foreclosure reviews. The
failure to identify the risks associated with foreclosure processing also resulted in servicers not taking
action to improve foreclosure documentation-related
processes ranging from custody and control of documents to proper notarization processes, or to enhance
oversight of third parties managing foreclosure
activities on their behalf.
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Part 3: Supervisory Response
At this time, the agencies are taking formal enforcement actions against each of the 14 servicers under
the authority of section 8(b) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act, 12 USC § 1818(b). The deficiencies
and weaknesses identified by examiners during their
reviews involved unsafe or unsound practices and
violations of law, which have had an adverse impact
on the functioning of the mortgage markets. Furthermore, the mortgage servicers’ deficient foreclosure
processes confirmed during the reviews have compromised the public trust and confidence in mortgage
servicing and have consequences for the housing
market and borrowers. The formal enforcement
actions will require servicers, among other things, to:
‰ Compliance program: Establish a compliance program to ensure mortgage-servicing and foreclosure
operations, including loss mitigation and loan
modification, comply with all applicable legal
requirements and supervisory guidance, and assure
appropriate policies and procedures, staffing,
training, oversight, and quality control of those
processes.
‰ Foreclosure review: Retain an independent firm to
conduct a review of residential foreclosure actions
that were pending at any time from January 1,
2009, through December 31, 2010, to determine
any financial injury to borrowers caused by errors,
misrepresentations, or other deficiencies identified
in the review, and to remediate, as appropriate,
those deficiencies.
‰ Dedicated resources for communicating with
borrowers/single point of contact: Ensure the following: effective coordination of communication
with borrowers related to foreclosure, loss mitigation, and loan modification activities; assurance
that communications are timely and appropriate
and designed to avoid borrower confusion; continuity in the handling of borrower cases during the
loan modification and foreclosure processes; reasonable and good faith efforts, consistent with
applicable law and contracts, to engage in loss
mitigation and foreclosure prevention for delin-
quent loans where appropriate; and assurances
that decisions concerning loss mitigation or loan
modifications will be made and communicated in a
timely manner.
‰ Third-party management: Establish policies and
procedures for outsourcing foreclosure or related
functions to ensure appropriate oversight and that
activities comply with all applicable legal requirements, supervisory guidance, and the servicer’s
policies and procedures, including the appropriate
selection and oversight of all third-party service
providers, including external legal counsel,
DMSPs, and MERS.
‰ Management information systems: Improve management information systems for foreclosure, loss
mitigation, and loan modification activities that
ensure timely delivery of complete and accurate
information to facilitate effective decision making.
‰ Risk assessment: Retain an independent firm to
conduct a written, comprehensive assessment of
risks in servicing operations, particularly in the
areas of foreclosure, loss mitigation, and the
administration and disposition of other real estate
owned, including but not limited to operational,
compliance, transaction, legal, and reputational
risks.
In addition to the actions against the servicers, the
Federal Reserve and the OTS have issued formal
enforcement actions against the parent holding companies to require that they enhance on a consolidated
basis their oversight of mortgage-servicing activities,
including compliance, risk management, and audit.
The agencies will monitor and assess, on an ongoing
basis, the corrective actions taken by the servicers
and holding companies that are required by the
enforcement actions and take further action, when
necessary, to address failures. Enforcement actions
and more frequent monitoring will remain in place at
each servicer until that servicer has demonstrated
that its weaknesses and deficiencies have been cor-
14
April 2011
rected, including that adequate policies, procedures,
and controls are in place. The agencies will continue
to explore ways to improve their supervisory frame-
works to identify more promptly and effectively the
potential risks in mortgage-servicing and other banking operations.
Part 4: Industry Reforms
Financial regulatory agencies are developing standards within their authority to improve the transparency, oversight, and regulation of mortgage-servicing
and foreclosure processing and to set additional
thresholds for responsible management and operation of mortgage-servicing activities. Moreover, a
uniform set of national mortgage-servicing and
foreclosure-processing standards would help promote
accountability and appropriateness in dealing with
consumers and strengthen the housing finance
market.
Industry reforms that could improve the oversight
and regulation of mortgage-servicing and foreclosure
processing should generally include standards that
require servicers to address major areas of weaknesses highlighted in the review, including in the following general areas:
Governance and Oversight
‰ implement and routinely audit sound enterprisewide policies and procedures to govern and control
mortgage-servicing and foreclosure processes
‰ develop quality controls for effective management
of third-party vendors who support mortgageservicing and foreclosure processing
‰ strengthen the governance standards intended to
ensure compliance with applicable federal and
state laws and company policies and procedures
‰ develop company standards that emphasize accuracy and quality in the processing and validation
of foreclosure and other servicing-related documents throughout the entire foreclosure process
Organizational Structure, Staffing,
and Technology
‰ increase staffing to adequate levels and provide
them with requisite training to effectively manage
the volume of default loans and foreclosures
‰ upgrade information systems and practices to better store, track, and retrieve mortgage-related
documents
Accountability and Responsiveness
Dealing with Consumers
‰ ensure borrowers are offered appropriate lossmitigation options
‰ ensure proper custody and control of borrower
documents related to the servicing of the mortgage
‰ increase coordination between loss mitigation and
foreclosure-processing units to prevent inappropriate foreclosures
‰ improve communication with borrowers and establish measurable goals and incentives for delivering
accurate information and responsive assistance
‰ develop complaint-resolution processes that are
routinely monitored and measured for quality
assurance
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