Dry pen trumps wet ink
The “original wet ink” signature defence is a non-defence
Some stressed borrowers in Australia believe that they can
avoid enforcement following default under a bank mortgage because the bank does
not possess an “original wet ink” signed agreement.
They can latch onto this belief mindful of the recent
publicity in the USA of the case of Ibanez [U.S. Bank National Association vs. Antonio Ibanez & Ors. Supreme
Judicial Court (Massachusetts) 7 October 2010 (Full Court: Gants, Cordy, Botsford JJ)]. [Readable copy here ]
However, it was not the “original wet ink” signature which was in issue in this case.
That well reasoned decision of the full appeal Court saw the
Judgments of the lower Court affirmed and Ibanez and La Race, the mortgagors,
succeed against the banks which had “foreclosed” and purchased the properties
back at “foreclosure” sales after default by the borrowers.
These type of “foreclosure investments” have been touted in
Australia as suitable for Australians wanting to profit after the Global Financial
Crisis ("GFC”) and buy up under value houses in the
USA.
The Ibanez “house mortgage” of $US103,500, which was
recorded, was the subject of a “chain” of 5 successive sales and assignments after
the original mortgagee to various institutions, passing through Lehman Brothers
Bank, in a process known as “securitization”. This process saw a number of
mortgage loans “pooled” together by assignment into a “trust” and converted
into mortgage backed securities or “promissory notes” which carried an income
stream for an “investor” down the chain. This process has been identified as
instrumental to the “subprime” crisis with toxic debt in the USA and the
ensuing GFC.
Massachusetts is a
“title theory” state (not a “lien theory” state) which means legally that a
mortgage is a transfer of the legal title in the land and the mortgagor retains
only an equitable title. So the end result is that these investors down the
“chain” have legal title to someone’s home or land.
There was a default in the borrowers’ obligations and the
purported mortgagees exercised their contractual “power of sale” without any
Court order and foreclosed. However, under the legal code in Massachusetts (G.L. c. 183, S. 21and G.L. c. 244, S 14) only a valid assignee of a mortgage at the time of foreclosure can exercise the
right to foreclose.
The banks could not prove that they were in fact the title
holders to the mortgagees at the time of foreclosure. Assignments happened only
afterwards. During the chain of successive multiple assignments and the pooling
process, the banks had not done their paperwork. The issue in this case was not
whether than banks had an original wet ink signature. The issue was that the
foreclosure sales occurred before the assignments of the mortgages and the
banks did not have title as mortgagees at that crucial time.
In the USA, most States have a conveyancing system of land
which is based on “registration of title”. In Australia, under the Torrens
system (commenced by Sir Robert Torrens, Premier of South Australia in 1858),
as in most Commonwealth Nations, the system is “title by registration” and that
title is “indefeasible” once it is on the register. The difference is not
semantics.
In the USA title to land is mostly conveyed immediately upon
delivery of a valid signed deed, whereas in Australia title to land is conveyed
upon registration, (with the exception of old system title now not that
common). In Australia, the borrower has the legal title to the land and
possession, subject to the interests of the lender recorded on the folio of the
register. In Australia, “foreclosure” is not as common as in the USA, and an
order for the “power of sale” sought from the Court is preferred, because if a
bank uses “foreclosure”, it is barred from recovery personally against the borrower
of any shortfall.
The system of “registration of title” in most states in the
USA leads to uncertainty in “the chain of title”. A buyer of land or assignee
of a mortgagee has to make enquiries, or be at risk of their own peril, as to
the validity of prior title holders’ interests up the chain. The legal principal
is you can’t give what you don’t have, so if there was a defect up the chain,
the buyer or mortgagee down the chain does not have good title. That
uncertainty is compounded by the practice of many banks in the USA, unlike in Australia,
to sell their mortgages on, or assign by “note” their interests to 3rd party investors.
In Australia, any “instrument”, which creates an interest in
land, including a “deed” and a memorandum of mortgage, which is also a “dealing”, must be in writing and signed to be valid,
with some exceptions not relevant here. [Conveyancing Act NSW S 23C (1), Property Law Act VIC S 53 (1), Property Law Act QLD S11 (1)] There is no legal requirement that a valid
“instrument” also be an original, only that it is in writing and signed.
One of the benefits of title by registration in Australia is
that a copy of a “dealing” is kept on the register. The “original document rule” was abolished
in 1995 by the Uniform Evidence Law,
(S51 of the Evidence Acts) so the contents of a document can be proved in Court
by a copy.
In the writer’s humble opinion, there is no legal
requirement in Australia for a bank mortgagee to produce an “original wet ink”
document to prove a valid mortgage and enforce it against a borrower. It is no
defence.
The Ibanez case serves as a stern warning (although it didn’t decide the position of 3rd parties) to Australian or overseas investors interested in buying “foreclosure
title” properties in the various states of the USA at under value, following the
post- GFC fallout. They are not going to be “innocent”
of the foreclosure, of which they have notice. They need to be very cautious as
to title and have the title examined professionally. It can be disarmingly persuasive
to an investor if there is a bank vendor with a purported title. The increased cost of “title insurance” in “registration
of title” states to solve concerns has to be factored in and there are risks
with title insurance, including the solvency of the insurer as seen with the
bankruptcy of “Land America”.
Rather than using the spurious “original wet ink” defence,
the better defence would be the “dry pen”. If the borrower never signed the
mortgage, because the ink ran out, then that is a complete defence in both Australia
and the USA.
J.B. de V. T.
5 December 29011
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