Lawyer Commentary JD Supra United States Penmanship Lesson: Technical Defects in Massachusetts Pre-foreclosure Letters Not Grounds For Voiding Foreclosures

Penmanship Lesson: Technical Defects in Massachusetts Pre-foreclosure Letters Not Grounds For Voiding Foreclosures

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In a victory for common sense, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (the “SJC”) has held that MASS. GEN. LAWS ch. 244 § 35A (“Section 35A”) does not relate to “the foreclosure of mortgages by the exercise of a power of sale,” and thus failure to “strictly adhere” to its requirements does not void a foreclosure sale. See U.S. Bank, N.A., as Trustee v. Schumacher. [1] The Schumacher decision will curtail costly and unnecessary post-foreclosure legal proceedings in Massachusetts.

First enacted in 2008, and amended in 2010, Section 35A requires that after a mortgagor has defaulted but before the loan can be accelerated, the mortgagee must serve the mortgagor with a certain notice (the “35A Notice”). The 35A Notice informs the mortgagor, among other things, of his default and right to cure the default within 150 days. The statute specifies the content of the 35A Notice, such as the nature of the default; the date by which the mortgagor has to cure the default;[2] the name, address, and telephone number of the current mortgagee; and the name of either the mortgage loan originator or broker.[3]

Before Schumacher, Massachusetts courts disagreed on whether the failure to “strictly adhere” with the requirements of Section 35A would void a foreclosure sale. The dispute centered on whether the 35A Notice constitutes a part of the exercise of the “power of sale” contained in a residential mortgage. Under Massachusetts law, the failure to “strictly adhere” to the legal requirements that govern the “power of sale” in a nonjudicial foreclosure renders a resulting foreclosure sale void. See, e.g., U.S. Bank, N.A. v. Ibanez.[4] In Ibanez, the SJC defined the “power of sale” as being codified in Sections 11 through 17C of Chapter 244, and in Section 21 of Chapter 183, of the Massachusetts General Laws. Because Section 35A is not one of the statutory sections enumerated in Ibanez, some courts refused to find that the 35A Notice is subject to the strict adherence standard applied to the power of sale and thus, held that a mere technical defect in the 35A Notice was insufficient to void a subsequent foreclosure sale.[5]

Yet, in the past several years, former mortgagors facing post-foreclosure eviction sought to void foreclosure sales, and thus avoid eviction, based on purely technical defects with a 35A Notice. Like the mortgagor in Schumacher, many argued that the alleged failure to list the current mortgagee or the alleged failure to list either the mortgage originator or mortgage broker on the 35A Notice was sufficient to void a foreclosure sale. Several decisions of the Massachusetts Housing Court, often with little or no analysis, had adopted this position.[6] The SJC’s ruling in Schumacher abrogates those decisions.

In Schumacher, the mortgagor had been foreclosed upon and the foreclosing entity had brought a post-foreclosure summary process action to evict him.[7] In defense, the mortgagor asserted that the foreclosure sale was void because of alleged, technical defects in the 35A Notice that was sent prior to the loan’s acceleration, namely (1) in the field for mortgage originator, the 35A Notice stated “N/A,” and (2) the 35A Notice listed the securitization trust as the current mortgagee, even though a public assignment of the mortgage had not yet been recorded.[8] Thus, he argued, the foreclosing entity lacked standing to evict him because it purportedly did not hold valid title to the property in light of the alleged defects in the 35A Notice. Notwithstanding Schumacher’s identification of the alleged defects, the Housing Court found that “no credible defenses were presented” by the mortgagor, and entered summary judgment against him.[9]

On appeal, the SJC affirmed the Housing Court’s ruling and held that Section 35A is merely a “preforeclosure undertaking” and not “one of the statute[s] ‘relating to the foreclosure of mortgages by the exercise of a power of sale.’”[10] The SJC reasoned that foreclosure is correctly understood to be the “termination of all rights of the mortgagor… in the property covered by the mortgage.”[11] Section 35A, however, “is not the first step in terminating the mortgagor’s right” because it expressly prohibits the acceleration of the debt during the cure period, which “is a clear indication that foreclosure proceedings do not commence with the issuance of the written [35A] notice.”[12] Thus, Section 35A is not part of the “power of sale,” and the failure to “strictly adhere” to the requirements of Section 35A is not grounds on which to void a subsequent foreclosure sale.[13]

In his concurrence, Justice Gants spoke about the “practical consequence” of the decision. Justice Gants agreed that because Section 35A is not part of the power of sale, it is not subject to the strict adherence standard. A technical violation of Section 35A, therefore, will not void a foreclosure unless the violation is “so fundamentally unfair that [the mortgagor] is entitled to affirmative equitable relief, specifically the setting aside of the foreclosure sale.”[14]

The effect of the Sch...

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