by Tanta

This is a big deal, and will no doubt strike real fear in the hearts of
stated-income lenders everywhere. Our own Uncle Festus sent me this decision, in
which Judge Leslie Tchaikovsky ruled that a National City HELOC that had been
"foreclosed out" would be discharged in the debtors' Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Nat
City had argued that the debt should be non-dischargeable because the debtors
made material false representations (namely, lying about their income) on which
Nat City relied when it made the loan. The court agreed that the debtors had in
fact lied to the bank, but it held that the bank did not "reasonably rely" on
the misrepresentations.
I argued some
time ago that the whole point of stated income lending was to make the
borrower the fall guy: the lender can make a dumb loan--knowing perfectly well
that it is doing so--while shifting responsibility onto the borrower, who is the
one "stating" the income and--in theory, at least--therefore liable for the
misrepresentation. This is precisely where Judge Tchaikovsky has stepped in and
said "no dice." This is not one of those cases where the broker or lender seems
to have done the lying without the borrower's knowledge; these are not
sympathetic victims of predatory lending. In fact, the very egregiousness of the
borrowers' misrepresentations and chronic debt-binging behavior is what seems to
have sent the Judge over the edge here, leading her to ask the profoundly
important question of how a bank like National City could have "reasonably
relied" on these borrowers' unverified statements of income to make this
loan.
And as I argued the other day on the subject of due
diligence, it isn't so much that individual loans are fraudulent than that
the published guidelines by which the loans were made and evaluated encouraged
fraudulent behavior, or at least made it "fast and easy" for fraud to occur.
Judge Tchaikovsky directly addresses the issue of the bank's reliance on
"guidelines" that should, in essence, never have been relied upon in the first
place.
*************
Here follow some lengthy
quotes from the decision, which was docketed yesterday and is not, as far as I
know, yet published. From In re Hill (City National Bank v. Hill), United States
Bankruptcy Court, Northern District of California, Case No. A.P. 07-4106 (May
28, 2008):
This adversary proceeding is a poster child for some of the
practices that have led to the current crisis in our housing
market.
Indeed. The debtors, the Hills, bought their home in El
Sobrante, California, twenty years ago for $220,000. After at least five
refinances, their total debt on the home at the time they filed for Chapter 7 in
April of 2007 was $683,000. Mr. Hill worked for an automobile parts wholesaler;
Mrs. Hill had a business distributing free periodicals. According to the court,
their combined annual income never exceeded $65,000.
In April 2006, the
Hills refinanced their existing $100,000 second lien through a mortgage broker
with National City. Their new loan was an equity line of $200,000; after paying
off the old lien and other consumer debt, the Hills received $60,000 in cash. On
this application the Hills stated their annual income as $145,716. The property
appraised for $785,000.
By October 2006 the Hills were short of money
again, and applied directly to National City to have their HELOC limit increased
to $250,000 to obtain an additional $50,000 in cash. On this application, six
months later, the Hills' annual income was stated as $190,800, and the appraised
value was $856,000.
At the foreclosure sale in April 2007, the first
lien lender bought the house at auction for $450,000, apparently the amount of
its first lien.
The Hills claimed that they did not misrepresent their
income on the April loan, and that they had signed the application without
reading it. The broker testified rather convincingly that the Hills had indeed
read the documents before signing them--Mrs. Hill noticed an error on one
document and initialed a correction to it. No doubt because the October loan,
the request for increase of an existing HELOC, did not go through a broker, the
Hills admitted to having misrepresented their income on that application. The
Court found that:
Moreover, the Hills, while not highly educated, were not
unsophisticated. They had obtained numerous home and car loans and were familiar
with the loan application process. They knew they were responsible for supplying
accurate information to a lender concerning their financial condition when
obtaining a loan. Even if the Court were persuaded that they had signed and
submitted the October Loan Application without verifying its accuracy, their
reckless disregard would have been sufficient to satisfy the third and fourth
elements of the Bank’s claim.
This is not an excessively
soft-hearted judge who fell for some self-serving sob story from the debtors.
"Reckless disregard" is rather strong language.
Unfortunately for
National City, Her Honor was just as unsympathetic to its claims:
However, the Bank’s suit fails due to its failure to prove the sixth
element of its claim: i.e., the reasonableness of its reliance.6 As stated
above, the reasonableness of a creditor’s reliance is judged by an objective
standard. In general, a lender’s reliance is reasonable if it followed its
normal business practices. However, this may not be enough if those practices
deviate from industry standards or if the creditor ignored a “red flag.” See
Cohn, 54 F.3d at 1117. Here, it is highly questionable whether the industry
standards–-as those standards are reflected by the Guidelines–-were objectively
reasonable. However, even if they were, the Bank clearly deviated to some
extent from those standards. In addition, the Bank ignored a “red flag” that
should have called for more investigation concerning the accuracy of the income
figures. . . .
In short, while the
Court found that the Hills knowingly made false representations to the lender,
the lender's claim that it "reasonably relied" on these representations doesn't
hold water, because "stated income guidelines" are not reasonable things to rely
on. In essence, the Court found, such lending guidelines boil down to what the
regulators call "collateral dependent" loans, where the lender is relying on
nothing, at the end of the day, except the value of the collateral, not the
borrower's ability or willingness to repay. If you make a "liar loan," the Judge
is saying here, then you cannot claim you were harmed by relying on lies. And if
you rely on an inflated appraisal, that's your lookout, not the
borrower's.
Based on the foregoing, the Court concludes that either
the Bank did not rely on the Debtors representations concerning their income or
that its reliance was not reasonable based on an objective standard. In fact,
the minimal verification required by an “income stated” loan, as established by
the Guidelines, suggests that this type of loan is essentially an “asset based”
loan. In other words, the Court surmises that the Bank made the loan
principally in reliance on the value of the collateral: i.e., the House. If so,
the Bank obtained the appraisal upon which it principally relied in making the
loan. Subsequent events strongly suggest that the appraisal was inflated.
However, under these circumstances, the Debtors cannot be blamed for the Bank’s
loss, and the Bank’s claim should be discharged.
This is going to give a lot of stated income lenders--and
investors in "stated income" securities--a really bad rotten no good day. As it
should. They have managed to give the rest of us a really bad rotten no good
couple of years, with no end in sight.