[Quote:]
Yano-Horoski, appearing pro se, requested a conference in February to seek a deal with IndyMac Bank on the $292,500 mortgage she took out in August 2004 on her East Patchogue home.
Following a series of hearings attempting “to obtain meaningful cooperation” from the bank, Spinner ordered that a bank representative attend a conference in September.
Karen Dickinson, regional loss mitigation manager for IndyMac, appeared and “made it abundantly clear that no form of mediation, resolution or settlement would be acceptable” to the bank, Justice Spinner wrote.
Notably, the judge wrote, the bank asserted that the borrower had previously defaulted on a forbearance agreement when in fact the agreement had not even been sent out until after it was due.
“Defendant, through Plaintiff’s duplicity, found herself to be in unique and uncomfortable position of being placed in default of the ‘agreement’ even before she had received it,” Spinner wrote.
The bank also rejected an offer Yano-Horoski’s daughter to buy the house at fair market value.
“It was evident from Ms. Dickinson’s opprobrious demeanor and condescending attitude that no proffer by Defendant (short of consent to foreclosure and ejectment of Defendant and her family) would be acceptable to Plaintiff,” the judge wrote, adding that even a “desperate” offer of a deed in lieu of foreclosure was “met with bland equivocation.”
Spinner ordered another hearing last week at which discrepancies surfaced about how much was actually owed.
The bank claimed a balance of $527,437 was due, but Yano-Horoski gave a much lower figure –according to two bank letters, she owed around $285,000 as of August 2009.
Spinner pointed out that a prior affidavit by a bank representative, “presumably one with knowledge of the account,” tabbed the principal balance at $290,687.
The large disparity, coupled with Dickinson’s conduct, swung “the pendulum of credibility” heavily to the homeowner, the court held.
[..]
The judge concluded that the banks’ conduct was “wholly unsupportable at law or in equity, greatly egregious and so completely devoid of good faith that equity cannot be permitted to intervene on its behalf.”
But he went further than rejecting the foreclosure.
If the case was simply dismissed, he wrote, the court “cannot be assured that Plaintiff will not repeat this course of conduct.”
Also Spinner said that monetary sanctions were “not likely to have a salubrious or remedial effect” and, in any case, would not benefit the homeowner.
Imposing sanctions would bring little benefit to the homeowner, the judge wrote, leaving the “appropriate equitable disposition” of canceling the debt and discharging the mortgage.
Thus, he concluded that the original principal amount of $292,500 “should be cancelled, voided and set aside,” the mortgage be discharged and the bank barred from any attempt to collect on the note.
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They will loose on appeal I am afraid, although in my opinion, the company should liquidated.
This sounds more like Scottish Common Law, where the judge is obligated to keep in mind what proceedings will ultimately do to the actual flesh and blood human beings involved as well as obligated to base things on what actually happened. Unfortunately our legal system is based on English Common Law, which is all philosophical and based on who presents the better argument, regardless of what evidence is barred or what the consequences will mean for those involved. In other words, it is all about who has the best lawyers, not what actually happened or what is right or wrong.
On the upside, precedent is extremely important in our legal system and this at least sets one drop in the bucket. Let us hope more follow like it.
GOOG JOB JUDGE SPINNER!!
some thing started as a program to help low middle class get housing exploded into a massive crimminal enterprise to rob and defraud without penalty backed up those like jp morgan ,the innocent people were sold a bill of goods they didnt need and could not afford the mortage brokers chased the couple relentlesly to get their dividend [cut or percentage ]on a scam they[mortage brokers ] would never be held responsable for some as high as 20%,judge Spinner should have the suffolfk district attornerys office look into fraudulent documentation, it is nearly certain that Yano-Horoski possibly should have never got the mortage in the first place,where are you on this suffolk county DA???