
Oregon Bank Foreclosures: Frequently Unanswered Questions
The following Frequently Unanswered Questions have been provided in an effort to better understand Big Banks and their systemic inability to explain, answer, or even
The following Frequently Unanswered Questions have been provided in an effort to better understand Big Banks and their systemic inability to explain, answer, or even
When we last left this telephone conference in Part One, Damien Faust, chief legal counsel for Belial Bank, was regaling everyone with his brilliance in
The Conundrum. In Oregon we have a foreclosure conundrum: ORS 86.735(1) requires lenders to record all successive trust deed assignments when non-judicially foreclosing a trust
The sad reality is that negative equity, short sales, and foreclosures, will likely be around for quite a while. “Negative equity”, which is the excess
[This is Part Two of my post regarding the recent ruling by Magistrate Judge Stewart in the case of James v. ReconTrust, Bank of America,
Having counseled approximately two hundred Oregon homeowners drowning in negative equity, I have discovered that many, if not most, believe that somehow their lenders can
After several years of toil as a low paid toady for a high-powered foreclosure mill law firm, our intrepid young associate has finally won a
Introduction. Federal District Court Judge Michael W. Mosman ruled in favor of Bank of America and others in the recent foreclosure case of Jon Charles Beyer and
“Oh what a tangled web we weave, When first we practice to deceive!” Sir Walter Scott, Marmion, Canto vi. Stanza 17. Scottish author &
In common parlance today, a “default” denotes either nonperformance – or inadequate performance – that falls short of a written rule, guideline, or criterion. It