Title: When a Mortgage Company Goes Into Bankruptcy
1When a Mortgage Company Goes Into Bankruptcy
- Robert Franke and Allan Wisk
- Strasburger Price, LLP
24,000 homes
? More than 4,000 homes owned and managed by the
firm and its RIMCO subsidiary could be put on the
market, depressing property values in Detroit and
Highland Park. ? Mortgage and land contract
holders worry about losing homes because taxes
and property insurance premiums werent forwarded
and not all monthly payments were credited, court
records show.
Mortgage firms collapse leaves thousands in
limbo and jeopardizes property values.
3I cant find anyone to fix my furnace, and I just
spent 4,000 of my own money having the roof
fixed, said Mary Watts, who lives on Braille
Street and complained to a bankruptcy court
trustee in March. Now we have rats. Id be
surprised if anything gets fixed.
The Michigan regulator said his investigators
found MCA had taken mortgage payments of
thousands of customers and put them in its
general operating fund rather than crediting
customers accounts.
MCA Financial was servicing about 4,700 mortgages
totaling 355 million and about 7,000 land
contracts valued at 181 million, bankruptcy
court records show.
Dozens of MCA borrowers received foreclosure
notices despite making full monthly payments, . .
.
Most of the homes owned by MCA and managed by
RIMCO are in neighbor-hoods where the average
annual income is less than 10,000, according to
maps generated by the U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development.
One example cited in court involves RIMCOs
purchase of a Detroit house for 10,000 at a tax
sale. Within weeks, it mortgaged the house to
outside Investors for 50,000.
4? The company also made payments for a boat owned
by Quinlan and leased six luxury cars for
executives, including a Mercedes 500 SL, two
Cadillacs and two Jeep Grand Cherokees. ? One of
the biggest MCA investors was the Detroit Police
and Firemens Pension Fund, which gave the
company 60 million in unsecured loans. Nick
Degel, administration secretary for the pension
fund, declined to discuss the loan.
? The firms may owe Detroit as much as 5
million in property taxes and an untallied sum in
unpaid water bills.
? The year before MCA laid off 900 employees . . .
5BANKRUPTCY OVERVIEW
- Lender Claim
- Bank Funded Mortgage Originator pursuant to
Warehouse Line of Credit - Bank Takes Lien on Mortgages Generated by
Mortgage Originator - Perfect Pursuant to Applicable Law
6SECURED CLAIM
- Mortgage Originator Files Bankruptcy
- Automatic Stay - Section 362
- Except as provided in subsection (b) of this
section, a petition filed under section 301
operates as a stay, applicable to all entities,
of - the enforcement, against the debtor or against
property of the estate, of a judgment obtained
before the commencement of the case under this
title - any act to obtain possession of property of the
estate or of property from the estate or to
exercise control over property of the estate - any act to create, perfect, or enforce any lien
against property of the estate
7- any act to create, perfect, or enforce against
property of the debtor any lien to the extent
that such lien secures a claim that arose before
the commencement of the case under this title - any act to collect, assess, or recover a claim
against the debtor that arose before the
commencement of the case under this title and - the setoff of any debt owing to the debtor that
arose before the commencement of the case under
this title against any claim against the debtor.
8- Ipso Facto Default Clause - Section 365
- Notwithstanding a provision in an executory
contract or unexpired lease, or in applicable
law, an executory contract or unexpired lease of
the debtor may not be terminated or modified, and
any right or obligation under such contract or
lease may not be terminated or modified, at any
time after the commencement of the case solely
because of a provision in such contract or lease
that is conditioned on - the insolvency or financial condition of the
debtor at any time before the closing of the case - the commencement of a case under this title or
- the appointment of or taking possession by a
trustee in a case under this title or a custodian
before such commencement.
9- The Lender is Prevented from
- Liquidating Collateral
- Accelerating Loan/Enforcing It against Mortgage
Originator (IPSO Facto Default Clause - in
Documents) - Offsetting Against Obligation of Mortgage
Originator - Impact of Bankruptcy
- Collateral Property of Estate Disposed in Plan
- Claim Addressed in Plan
- Bifurcation Secured/Unsecured Claim
- Competing with Other Creditors for Limited Dollars
10- MCA Financial Corp.Case No. 99-42172U.S.
Bankruptcy CourtEastern District of Michigan,
Southern Division - On January 22, 1999, the MCA entities dismissed
their 900 employees and ceased operations. On
January 28, 1999, the Commissioner of the
Michigan Financial Institutions Bureau appointed
B. N. Bahadur as Conservator of Debtors. - On February 10, 1999, Debtors filed voluntary
Chapter 11 petitions, which cases were
subsequently consolidated.
11- During the cases, Debtors ceased nearly all
operations and liquidated most of their assets. - Lenders holding mortgage loans as collateral
formed the Bank Group. - Unsecured Creditors Committee was also formed.
- Many other creditors/interests secured lenders,
taxing authorities, investors, employees, City of
Detroit, unsecured creditors.
12Total Number Of Filed Claims 3193
Total Amount Claimed Total Amount Allowed
Unsecured 59,848,278.62
Secured 158,823,028.40
Priority 23,571,317.71
Unknown 73,889,567.08
Administrative 829,342.57
Total 316,132,191.81 829,342.57
13- Goal of Bank Group to protect position and
maximize recovery on collateral. - Financing order entered allow Debtors to
utilize Bank Groups cash collateral. - Bank Group did not pursue motion for relief from
stay (recognizing documentation issues minimal
value of collateral/expense associated with
disposition of collateral). Forced to oppose
numerous motions made by third parties. - On June 21, 2000, the Court entered an Order
Approving Settlement Agreement with the Bank
Group. The Settlement Agreement provided, inter
alia, that Debtors would receive 40 from the
sale of all Title-Mismatch Collateral and 25 of
all related entity collateral.
14- The Debtors Plan
- Debtors filed a Second Amended Consolidated Plan
and Disclosure Statement on July 19, 2000.
Confirmed August 21, 2000. - The Plan was a liquidating plan. The Agent was
authorized to liquidate the remaining assets of
the Debtors and distribute them to creditors in
accordance with priorities established under the
Bankruptcy Code.
15Class Description Status Amounts
1. Professional Fees and Expenses
2. Other Administrative Expense Claims
3.-9. Various Secured Claims Impaired
10. Holders of Debenture Series 1994 Secured Claim Impaired value of collateral
11. 507(a)(3) Priority Wage Claims Impaired 8,2681 (est)
12. 507(a)(4) Priority Benefit Claims Not Impaired 74,926 (est)
13. 507(a)(6) Priority Deposit Claims Not Impaired 20,382 (est)
14. 507(a)(8) Priority Tax Claims Impaired 1,972,687 (est)
17. General Unsecured Claims Impaired 232,399,222 (est)
18. Subordinated Claims Impaired
19. Claims against Pool Liquidating Trust Impaired
20. Interests Impaired
16- Class 11 wage claimants to receive 25 of their
allowed claims on the effective date. Class 12
Benefit Claims and Class 13 Deposit Claims to be
paid 100 of their allowed claims on the
effective date. The Bank Group agreed to allow
use of its cash collateral to fund these payments
in connection with settlement. - In general, secured creditors were paid to the
extent of the value of their collateral. Allowed
unsecured claims were to receive distributions,
but only after payments of administrative claims
and repayment of postpetition and emergency
loans. Unsecured claims estimated to exceed
180,000,000. Shareholders would not receive any
distribution.
17Bank Group Claim/Implementation of Settlement
- Treatment of Bank Group Claim
- Secured portion equal to value of remaining
collateral to be paid as liquidated subject to
surcharge. - Unsecured balance of claim in separate class of
unsecured claims. - Plan provided for Bank Group to receive release
from Debtors bankruptcy estates, Debtors, The
Pools, Sigma Financial, Certificate holders in
the Pools.
18- Bank Group transferred 1450 properties to Pool
Liquidating Agent. - Bank Group agreed to provide up to 1,250,000 to
Plan Agent for post-confirmation expenses and to
fund priority classes 11-14 in the Plan. - Agreed to split proceeds of certain notes with a
face value of 4,204,681.86 with the Debtors. - Unsecured Claim share pro-rata, but waived
right to share in first 500,000 distributed.
19- Debtors Liquidation Analysis
- Best case scenario 7.4 distribution to
unsecured creditors. - Most likely case 0.
20- Settlement
- On June 13, 2001, this Court entered (a)
Stipulated Order Transferring Title to HCDC
consistent with Debtors Second Amended and
Restated Combined Consolidated Plan Under Chapter
11 of the Bankruptcy Code and Disclosure
Statement and (b) Stipulated Order Transferring
Title to DNDC Consistent with Debtors Second
Amended and Restated Combined Consolidated Plan
Under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code and
Disclosure Statement. Under the above sale
orders 1,306 properties that had been surrendered
to Bank Group for disposition at the Bank Groups
discretion were sold to the Housing and Community
Development and the Detroit Neighborhood
Development Corporation for a total of 7,500,000.
21- Based on the Settlement Agreement, the Agent and
the Bank Group agreed that 319 of the rental
Properties sold and 118 of the retail Properties
sold were Title-Mismatch Collateral, and that 520
of the rental Properties and 75 of the retail
Properties were Related Entity Collateral. - The parties also agreed to a pro-rata
apportionment of the 7,500,000 sale proceeds of
3,332 per rental Property and 14,078 per retail
Property. - Based on the above, Debtors received 1,786.720
of the sale proceeds and the Bank Group received
4,395,471 of the sale proceeds.
22- USA Commercial Mortgage CompanyCase No.
06-10725U.S. Bankruptcy CourtDistrict of Nevada - USA Commercial Mortgage Company (USACM),
which sometimes did business under the trade name
USA Capital, is a Nevada corporation with its
main office in Las Vegas. USACM filed a
voluntary Chapter 11 case on April 13, 2006. - Prior to the petition date, USACM was in the
business of underwriting, originating, brokering,
funding and servicing commercial loans primarily
secured by undeveloped land and residential and
commercial developments, both on behalf of
investors and for its own account.
23- As of the petition date, the loan portfolio USACM
was servicing consisted of approximately 115
loans having a combined outstanding balance of
approximately 960 million. - USACMs business also included soliciting
individual investors to purchase fractional
interest in loans, as well as originating and
servicing the loans. As of the petition date,
there were approximately 3,600 investors whose
names appear as a Lender in the documents for
one or more of the serviced loans. - Same story six years later.
24- Prior to April 2006, USACM regularly made monthly
interest payments to direct lenders regardless of
whether the particular loans in which the direct
lenders had an interest were performing or
nonperforming. For example, during the first
three months of 2006, USACM collected on average
approximately 5.3 million per month in interest
payments on the serviced loans but paid out on
average approximately 9.7 million per month to
the direct lenders. - It is reported that prior management diverted at
least 46 million in principal repayments for use
as interest payments to investors.
25- USACMs inability to continue making monthly
payments to all direct lenders was a significant
contributing factor in the Debtors decision to
file for bankruptcy protection. - Another significant contributing factor was an
investigation by the U.S. Securities Exchange
Commission. Prior to the petition date, USACM
and an affiliate received notice from the SEC
that they were the subject of a Regulatory
Investigation. Results indicate
26- USACM made monthly payments to the direct lenders
regardless of whether the borrower had paid the
interest due. Full principal repayments by at
least four borrowers were collected by USACM but
not disbursed to the appropriate direct lenders. - Failure to obtain collateral to secure at least
one loan, loans without properly perfected
security interests, loans secured by second liens
and other potential violations of the Nevada
mortgage lending statute.
27- Many of the non-performing loans appear to have
been extended to borrowers who were affiliated or
otherwise related to USACMs pre-petition
management, such that the owners and officers of
USACM were partial owners of the borrower
entities through one or more of their various
entities.
28- USACMs loan servicing database contained
substantial errors, including but not limited to
the following (a) some borrower payments were
not entered into the system (b) most interest
payments from borrowers were not posted in a
timely manner (c) payments were not applied
according to the governing loan documents, which
indicate that payments are applied first to
outstanding interest, then principal (d) the
amount of interest owed by borrowers was not
calculated with the correct number of days
outstanding or correct amount of principal owing
(e) check numbers used were not in sequence or
were used multiple times and (f) servicing fees
were not charged or were calculated incorrectly.
29- The primary shareholders relinquished
management authority to Thomas J. Allison of
Mesirow Financial Interim Management, LLC, who
became the President, Chief Restructuring
Officer, and Chief Executive Officer of USACM
continues to serve in that capacity.
30The Bankruptcy Case
Total Amount Claimed Total Amount Allowed
Unsecured 281,576,090.00
Secured 169,535,584.00 200,000.00
Priority 5,035,809.00
Unknown 24,023.66
Administrative 10,575,543.00
Total 466,687,885.00 200,000.00
31- Orders approving debtors use of cash to continue
operating - Approval of motion to hold funds pending a
determination of the proper recipients - Records reconstructed/investors statements mailed
to all direct lenders and fund members - 65 million distribution to investors approved by
Court one of the primary goals of Debtors new,
post-petition management was to distribute to
investors, as promptly as possible after the
initial accounting work and reconstruction of the
loan records was completed, a significant portion
of the funds USACM had collected and was holding.
32- The Plan/Disclosure Statement Filed
- Asset Sale/Liquidating Plan
- USACM and First Trust propose to sell certain
assets including, servicing rights and specific
loans, free and clear of liens and interests, to
SPCP Group, LLC for the total cash purchase price
of 47.5 million, pursuant to the terms of an
asset purchase agreement. SPCP is acting as a
stalking horse. Specific bid procedures have
been put in place.
33- Plan provides for assumption and assignment of
agreements to purchaser and distribution of sales
proceeds and liquidation of remaining proceeds. - USACM is requesting that the exclusivity period
to confirm plan be extended to the end of the
year.
34General Comments on Mortgage Companies in Distress
- 1. Changes in Market Conditions, in the Business
Environment, Can Take a Company Down.
35- When a Mortgage Company Resorts to Fraud to
either (a) Save the Company, or (b) Make Money, a
Lot of Innocent Bystanders Get Hurt.
36- 3. Other Notes from Bankruptcy Cases involving
Mortgage Companies. - In Re First Alliance Mortgage Company, 298 B.R.
652 (C.D. Cal. 2003) - Debtors repayments of fully secured
obligations, where each payment by debtor results
in dollar-for-dollar reduction in debtors
secured debt, do not hinder, delay or defraud
creditors, and are not avoidable as fraudulent
transfers, because they do not put assets
otherwise available in bankruptcy distribution
out of creditors reach and do not result in
diminution of debtors estate.
37- Creditors committee could not set aside, as
fraudulent transfers subject to strong-arm
avoidance, payments that debtor had made to
financial institution that provided it with
secured warehouse line of credit, where each
payment that debtor made to financial institution
to satisfy particular extension of credit
resulted in release of mortgages with value in
excess of amount repaid, which payments did not
result in diminution of estate assets available
to debtors creditors.
38- In re SGE Mortgage Funding Corp. 278 B.R.
653(Bkrptcy. M.D. Ga. 2001) - Residential mortgage brokers assignment of its
interest in mortgage notes and in mortgages
securing them to investors who funded its
mortgage loan businessthe fact that these
assignments were or were not recorded had no
bearing on whether investors interest were
perfected. Perfection could only be
accomplished if investors took possession of
the notes.
39- In re Leedy Mortgage Company, Inc., 111 B.R. 488
(Bkrtcy. E.D. Pa. 1990) - Mortgagees, whose accounts the debtor had agreed
to service, were not entitled to secured claims
for shortages in accounts, as funds which debtor
had misappropriated could not be traced and
mortgagees were unable to identify any specific
property held by debtor at time of Chapter 7
filing that belonged to any of the mortgagees.
40BANKRUPTCY CODE CHANGES IMPACTING MORTGAGE
WAREHOUSE LENDING
Recent amendments to the Bankruptcy Code may
however provide a way for a lender restructure
its transactions with the mortgage originators to
lessen, and possibly eliminate, the costs of a
mortgage originators bankruptcy to lender.
- Since 1984, non-debtor participants in repurchase
agreements involving certain financial
instruments have enjoyed special protections
under the Bankruptcy Code.
41- (1) enforceability of ipso facto default clauses
in the repurchase agreement, - (2) limited exemptions from the automatic stay,
- (3) additional defenses to preference claims
asserted by a trustee or debtor-in-possession. - In 2005, Congress amended Section 101(47)(A)(i)
of the Bankruptcy Code to include mortgage loans
as a type of financial instrument that could be
the subject of a repurchase agreement and thus
entitled to the protections afforded such
agreements under the Bankruptcy Code.
42- Bankruptcy Code Definitions
- 11 U.S.C. 101(46) The term repo participant
means an entity that at any time before the
filing of a petition has an outstanding
repurchase agreement with the debtor. - 11 U.S.C. 101(47)(A)(i) The term repurchase
agreement means an agreement, including related
terms, which provides for the transfer of one or
more mortgage loans with a simultaneous
agreement by such transferee to transfer to the
transferor thereof mortgage loans ..., at a
date certain not later than 1 year such transfer
or on demand.
43Benefits Afforded to Repo Participants under the
Bankruptcy Code which are not Available to
Secured Lenders
- Contractual Right to Liquidate, Terminate, or
Accelerate a Repurchase Agreement - 11 U.S.C. 559 which provides that the
exercise of a contractual right of a
repo-participant to cause the liquidation of a
repurchase agreement because of a condition
described in section 365(e)(1) shall not be
stayed, avoided, or otherwise limited by
operation of any provision of this title or by
order of a court in any proceeding under title 11
of the United States Code.
44- Allows for the enforcement of so-called ipso
facto default clauses in the repurchase
agreement which generally allow for acceleration
of the term of repurchase agreement, termination
of the repurchase agreement, and/or liquidation
of the securities held as part of the repurchase
agreement.
45- Exemption from Application of the Automatic
Stay for Setoff Rights - 362(b)(7) provides that a bankruptcy filing does
not operate as a stay of the setoff by a repo
participant, of any mutual debt and claim under
or in connection with the repurchase agreements
that constitutes a setoff of a claim against the
debtor for a margin payment, as defined in
section 741 or 761 of this title, or settlement
payment, as defined in section 741 of this title,
arising out of repurchase agreements against
cash, securities, or other property held by,
pledged to, under the control of, or due from
such repo participant.to margin, guarantee,
secure or settle repurchase agreements.
46- 11 U.S.C. 362(o) provides that the rights not
subject to the stay pursuant to 362(b)(7) shall
not be stayed by any order of a court or
administrative agency in any proceeding under
title 11 of the United States Code.
47- Affirmative Defense to Avoidance Actions
- The Bankruptcy Code and applicable state law
provide a debtor-in-possession and/or a trustee
with the power to avoid certain pre-petition
transfers of property of the debtor. See 11
U.S.C. 544-551. - 11 U.S.C. 546(f) which provides
Notwithstanding sections 544, 545, 547,
548(a)(1)(B), and 548(b) of this title, the
trustee may not avoid a transfer that is a margin
payment as defined in section 741 or 761 of this
title or settlement payment, as defined in
section 741 of this title, made by or to a repo
participant, in connection with a repurchase
agreement and that is made before the
commencement of the case, except under
548(a)(1)(A) of this title.
48- 11 U.S.C. 741(8) defines settlement payment
as a preliminary settlement payment, a partial
settlement payment, an interim settlement
payment, a settlement payment on account, a final
settlement payment, or any other similar payment
commonly used in the securities trade.
49- Impact of Amendments
- The amendments to The Bankruptcy Code were
intended to address the uncertainty of the
characterization of the transactions as either
financial contracts or ordinary loans - Commentators believe that all repurchase
agreements are explicitly covered by the
definition of Securities Contract and intended
to eliminate any inquiry as to whether a
repurchase or reverse repurchase transaction is a
purchase and sale transaction or a secured
financing.
50- Prior to the amendment there were a number of
cases interpreting whether a contract was a true
repurchase agreement or a secured transaction.
In almost every instance where a legal
characterization of a repurchase has been
litigated, the court ruled that the agreements in
question were ambiguous and consideration of
extrinsic evidence was required before a final
determination on the legal character of the
agreement could be made.
51- In Bevill, 67 BR. 557 (D.N.J. 1986) the court
concluded that the selected inclusionof terms
customarily found in secured loan transactions
does not automatically convert the repurchase
agreements into secured loan instruments and
does not nullify the express language of purchase
and sale which the parties voluntarily choose to
describe their transactions. However, the
presence of such terms in the agreements does
raise sufficient doubts as to the intent of the
parties to justify examination of extrinsic
evidence of intent.
52- Conclusion
- The protections and benefits given to repo
participants in a bankruptcy case are completely
at odds with the primary purpose of the
Bankruptcy Code the maximization of the
debtors assets for the benefit of all creditors.
Consequently, debtors and/or trustees are going
to be preconditioned to litigate the character of
purported repurchase agreements if there are
contradictory terms in an agreement. - It remains to be seen if the debtors and/or
trustees will acknowledge that the repurchase
agreements are protected transactions that fit
within the formal definitions developed in the
marketplace and included in the Code.