Financial Institutions vs. BNY Mellon
Financial Institutions vs. BNY Mellon
Defendant.
Plaintiffs Commerce Bank, Amici Associates, L.P., Amici Offshore, Ltd., Amici
Qualified Associates, L.P., The Collectors Fund LLC, Cedar Hill Onshore Mortgage
Opportunity Fund, L.P., First Financial of Maryland Federal Credit Union, First National
Banking Company, LL Funds LLC, NCMIC Insurance Company, SBLI USA Mutual
Life Insurance Company, Inc., Thomaston Savings Bank, and VNB Capital Corp.,
(collectively, “Plaintiffs”), by their attorneys Vandenberg & Feliu, LLP, for their
identified in “Exhibit C” (each a “Trust” and, collectively, “the Trusts”). The corpuses of
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the Trusts consist primarily of residential mortgage loans made by Countrywide Home
Loans, Inc.
evidencing the mortgage loans belonging to the Trusts, such as the promissory notes,
mortgages, and assignments. As a result, Defendant did not receive the Trust corpuses as
seek to cure the failure to deliver documents, as well as other breaches of obligations of
the parties involved in the establishment and continued servicing and administration of
the Trusts.
form of dramatically increased costs, reduced borrower payments, and increased losses
N.A. and its affiliates (as applicable, “Bank of America”) in servicing and administering
the loans in the Trusts in accordance with the action styled Knights of Columbus v. Bank
of New York Mellon, Index No. 651442/2011 (N.Y. Sup. Ct.), the second amended
complaint for which is incorporated herein by reference and attached as “Exhibit A.” On
June 29, 2011, without Plaintiffs’ knowledge or consent, Defendant commenced a special
proceeding, pursuant to N.Y. C.P.L.R. Article 77, in the Supreme Court of the State of
New York, Index No. 651786/2011, (the “Article 77 Proceeding”) that purports to settle
all of Plaintiffs’ claims against Bank of America and its affiliates. See Proposed
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not approved or is modified to exempt Plaintiffs’ claims against Bank of America and its
Master Servicer have: (1) been examined by the Office of Comptroller of the Currency,
the Office of Thrift Supervision, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the
oversight and monitoring of third party law firms and vendors”; (2) been found by the
banking practices” “[i]n connection with certain foreclosures of loans in its residential
mortgage servicing portfolio,” which is subjecting each Trust to unknown costs and
expenses; (3) been accused by the City of Buffalo, among others, for failing to properly
neighborhoods and increasing losses to the Trusts’ beneficiaries; (4) been accused by the
Federal Trade Commission of engaging in a deliberate strategy to “mark up” the actual
cost of services that are ultimately paid by each Trust; (5) been exposed by AMERICAN
BANKER for using affiliates to place on homes insurance costing up to ten times the price
of regular policies, which premiums are ultimately charged to the beneficiaries of each
Trust; and (6) had a court find that a practice that an employee of a Trust administrator
testified under oath was “customary” precluded a similar trust from enforcing its rights
under a mortgage.
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Plaintiffs’ claims against Defendant, other than those regarding Defendant’s entry into
PARTIES
in Kansas City, Missouri, with branches in Missouri, Colorado, Illinois, Kansas, and
with its headquarters and principal place of business in New York, New York.
British Virgin Islands and with its headquarters and principal place of business in New
incorporated in and with its headquarters and principal place of business in New York,
New York.
incorporated in Delaware with its headquarters and principal place of business in New
12. Plaintiff Cedar Hill Onshore Mortgage Opportunity Fund, L.P. is a limited
liability company incorporated in Delaware with its headquarters and principal place of
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credit union with its headquarters and principal place of business in Lutherville,
Maryland.
incorporated in and with its headquarters and principal place of business in Clive, Iowa.
17. Plaintiff SBLI USA Mutual Life Insurance Company, Inc. is an insurance
company incorporated in and with its headquarters and principal place of business in
savings bank with its headquarters and principal place of business in Thomaston,
with its headquarters and principal place of business in Wayne, New Jersey.
21. Defendant BNYM, formerly named The Bank of New York, is a New
York state-chartered bank with trust powers, incorporated in Delaware, with its principal
place of business located in New York, New York. Defendant serves as Trustee for the
Trusts.
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business model in his February 11, 2009 testimony before the House Financial Services
Committee as follows:
The business model of The Bank of New York Mellon is very different from a
traditional retail or commercial or investment bank. In contrast to most of the
other companies here today, our business model does not focus on the broad retail
market or products such as mortgages, credit cards or auto loans. Nor do we even
do typical lending to corporate businesses. A good way to think of The Bank of
New York Mellon is that we are a “bank for banks.” The lion’s share of our
business is dedicated to helping other financial institutions around the world. 1
23. The Court has jurisdiction over this proceeding pursuant to CPLR 301 and
303. The Bank of New York Mellon is a New York state charted bank with its principal
place of business in the City of New York. Each Trust is a New York Trust formed under
the laws of the State of New York. The Bank of New York Mellon participated in the
transaction, the formation of each Trust, and other activities within the State that led to
24. Venue is proper in this Court pursuant to CPLR 503(c) and 506. The Bank
of New York Mellon’s principal office is located at One Wall Street, New York, NY
10286.
25. BNYM is the Trustee of each Trust for the benefit of the Trusts’ investors
26. The document providing for the establishment and administration of each
1
http://1.usa.gov/1dVhSlU.
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27. The corpus of each Trust consists primarily of residential mortgage loans
made by Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. and/or its affiliates Park Granada LLC, Park
28. In the securitization context, when a borrower seeks and obtains a home
loan, the lender, called an “Originator,” typically sells the loan to an entity, called a
“Seller,” acquiring loans for the purpose of selling them into an RMBS Trust. The Seller
holds the loan for a period of time, during which either the Seller (or the Originator or
some other designee on behalf of the Seller) collects payments from the borrower.
29. Once the Seller has obtained a sufficient number of loans, the Seller sells
those loans to an entity called a “Depositor,” which typically holds the loans for a brief
30. The Depositor in turn sells the loans to a Trust, which, in exchange for
value received from investors, issues beneficial ownership interests called “Certificates.”
31. At the time of each transfer, the selling party is responsible for delivering
loan documents, called a “Mortgage File,” to the purchaser or its designee. If each
transfer occurs properly, the Mortgage File, including the mortgage obligation and all
32. Based upon the assumption that the loans were deposited into each Trust,
borrowers begin making payments to each Trust through the “Master Servicer.”
33. For the Trusts at issue in this case, Countrywide Home Loans Servicing
LP (a/k/a “Countrywide Home Loans”) was the original Master Servicer. Countrywide
Home Loans Servicing LP became BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP before merging into
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Bank of America N.A. Throughout the remainder of the Complaint, this entity and its
34. When the Master Servicer collects loan payments from borrowers, the
Master Servicer transfers those payments, less allowable deductions, to the Defendant,
who, as Trustee of each Trust, distributes those payments to Trust beneficiaries, called
participate in the cash flow the Master Servicer collects from borrowers relating to the
Trust primarily by two entities: Defendant “Trustee”, which is the “face” of each Trust
for Certificateholders such as Plaintiffs, and the “Master Servicer”, which as the servicer
of the Trust loans, is the “face” of each Trust with borrowers. The entire process is
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36. Because the Trustee holds the Trust corpus for the beneficiaries, the
Master Servicer will act in the Trustee’s name when taking action against borrowers. This
includes bringing foreclosure actions in the Trustee’s name against borrowers who are
37. Recent revelations from a variety of credible sources indicate that the
Trustee BNYM and the Master Servicer Bank of America have been acting and continue
to act for their own benefit rather than for the benefit of Certificateholders such as
Plaintiffs. Furthermore, the acts detailed below indicate that the Trustee and the Master
Servicer may be damaging the borrowers whose loans make up each Trust’s corpus and
38. In 2008, the United States began experiencing a national financial crisis
because some of the nation’s largest financial institutions were engaging in irresponsible
lending practices and leveraging of debt. The financial crisis resulted in an unprecedented
federal bailout of the nation’s largest financial institutions, including Defendant Trustee
and the Master Servicer with Defendant Trustee receiving $3 billion under the Capital
Purchase Program and the Master Servicer receiving $25 billion under the Capital
Purchase Program and $20 billion under the Targeted Investment Program. A national
foreclosure crisis has accompanied the national financial crisis, bringing with it record
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39. Losing a home to foreclosure can be one of the most serious, stressful, and
devastating events in a person’s life. During the foreclosure process, borrowers should be
treated with respect, and the foreclosure process should be performed in a manner that is
including borrowers working to save their homes from foreclosure such as: (1) honest
borrowers experiencing difficult life events (“Good Faith Borrowers”); and (2) victims of
predatory lending activities who were misled or defrauded outright into obtaining loans
they could not afford (“Predatory Lending Victims”). The Master Servicer should provide
Good Faith Borrowers a reasonable opportunity to stay in their homes when that result
exceeds the net present value of foreclosing. The entity (or its successor in interest) that
sold a Trust a loan made to a Predatory Lending Victim, by contrast, should repurchase
the loan from the Trust as it warranted at the time of sale and face the legal consequences
41. Borrowers losing homes to foreclosure also fall into other categories,
including the following: (1) borrowers who cannot make net present value positive
payments under any circumstances and/or have abandoned the premises (“Abandoned
purchases, or other fraudulent acts, which often are accompanied by a failure to make any
Borrowers (who typically either abandon the property or start to destroy it) are a source
of great concern to local governments charged with maintaining quality of life in these
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involving Abandoned Properties and Fraudulent Borrowers – are necessary from both a
done quickly to reduce the decay and decimation to a neighborhood that accompanies
42. Each Trust PSA contained express terms providing for delivery of the
loans into the Trust. 2 Specifically, each PSA contained language stating that the
Depositor would deliver certain critical documents evidencing and supporting each loan
to the Trustee:
In connection with the transfer and assignment set forth in clause (b)
above, the Depositor has delivered or caused to be delivered to the Trustee
(or, in the case of the Delay Delivery Mortgage Loans that are Initial
Mortgage Loans, will deliver or cause to be delivered to the Trustee within
thirty (30) days following the Closing Date and in the case of the Delay
Delivery Mortgage Loans that are Supplemental Mortgage Loans, will
deliver or cause to be delivered to the Trustee within twenty (20) days
following the applicable Supplemental Transfer Date) for the benefit of
the Certificateholders the following documents or instruments with respect
to each Mortgage Loan so assigned:
2
Because PSA language is substantially identical across the Trusts, Plaintiffs will
quote the language in CWALT 2007-25 PSA, attached as “Exhibit D,” for purposes of
illustration.
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PSA § 2.01(c).
43. As part of the delivery process, the Trustee acknowledged receipt of these
critical documents and promised to hold them “in trust for the exclusive use and benefit
of all present and future Certificateholders.” The Trustee further acknowledged that “it
PSA § 2.02(a).
44. The Trustee was required to execute “the Initial Certification in the form
annexed hereto as Exhibit F-1”, in which it was to state that it had both received a Note
and an assignment, and that it had undertaken a “review and examination” of those
documents:
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45. The Trustee subsequently had to issue a Final Certification with respect to
the loans:
Not later than 90 days after the Closing Date, the Trustee shall deliver to
the Depositor, the Master Servicer and Countrywide (on its own behalf
and on behalf of Park Granada, Park Monaco and Park Sienna) a Final
Certification with respect to the Initial Mortgage Loans in the form
annexed hereto as Exhibit H-1, with any applicable exceptions noted
thereon. If, in the course of such review, the Trustee finds any document
constituting a part of a Mortgage File which does not meet the
requirements of Section 2.01, the Trustee shall list such as an exception in
the Final Certification [….]
PSA § 2.02(a).
46. It was also the Trustee’s duty to affix certain language to each assignment
of Mortgage:
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Mortgages to the Trustee, except that, (i) with respect to any assignments
of Mortgage as to which the Trustee has not received the information
required to prepare such assignment in recordable form, the Trustee’s
obligation to do so and to deliver the same for such recording shall be as
soon as practicable after receipt of such information and in any event
within thirty (30) days after receipt thereof and (ii) the Trustee need not
cause to be recorded any assignment which relates to a Mortgage Loan,
the Mortgaged Property and Mortgage File relating to which are located in
any jurisdiction (including Puerto Rico) under the laws of which in the
opinion of counsel the recordation of such assignment is not necessary to
protect the Trustee’s and the Certificateholders’ interest in the related
Mortgage Loan.
PSA § 2.01(c).
47. Furthermore, numerous provisions of the PSA made clear that the Trustee
was required to maintain possession of the Mortgage File, which contained, among other
things, the Note and any assignments, and that possession of the Mortgage File by any
other entity was to be a closely guarded and monitored exception rather than the rule.
For example:
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48. Even the PSA’s “fail safe” provision (providing that the Trustee has a
security interest in the loans if a true sale does not take place) required that the Mortgage
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and hold all or part of the Mortgage Files as required under the PSA. As a consequence,
Plaintiffs did not acquire residential mortgage-backed securities, but instead acquired
50. In Kemp v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., 440 B.R. 624 (D.N.J. Bankr.
2010), the Master Servicer, identifying itself as the servicer for Defendant, filed a secured
claim in the bankruptcy of homeowner and debtor John Kemp. Kemp filed an adversary
complaint against the Master Servicer asserting that “the Bank of New York cannot
51. At the trial in Kemp, a supervisor and operational team leader for the
Master Servicer’s Litigation Management Department testified that “to her knowledge,
the original note never left the possession of Countrywide, and that the original note
internal FedEx tracking numbers. She also confirmed that the new allonge had not been
attached or otherwise affixed to the note. She testified further that it was customary for
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Countrywide to maintain possession of the original note and related loan documents.” Id.
at 628.
52. Summarizing the record, the New Jersey Bankruptcy Court found that:
[W]e have established on this record that at the time of the filing of the
proof of claim, the debtor’s mortgage had been assigned to the Bank of
New York, but that Countrywide did not transfer possession of the
associated note to the Bank. Shortly before trial in this matter, the
defendant executed an allonge to transfer the note to the Bank of New
York; however, the allonge was not initially affixed to the original note,
and possession of the note never actually changed. The Pooling and
Servicing Agreement required an endorsement and transfer of the note to
the Trustee, but this was not accomplished prior to the filing of the proof
of claim. The defendant has now produced the original note and has
apparently affixed the new allonge to it, but the original note and allonge
still have not been transferred to the possession of the Bank of New York.
Countrywide, the originator of the loan, filed the proof of claim on behalf
of the Bank of New York as Trustee, claiming that it was the servicer for
the loan. Pursuant to the PSA, Countrywide Servicing, and not
Countrywide, Inc., was the master servicer for the transferred loans. At all
relevant times, the original note appears to have been either in the
possession of Countrywide or Countrywide Servicing.
Id. at 629.
53. “With this factual backdrop”, the New Jersey Bankruptcy Court turned “to
the issue of whether the challenge to the proof of claim filed on behalf of the Bank of
New York, by its servicer Countrywide, can be sustained”, and found that:
Id. at 629-630.
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“examined [104] foreclosures filed in two New York counties (Westchester and the
55. The process adopted by the Proposed Settlement Agreement in the Article
inventory of the Mortgage File – demonstrates that Defendant failed to receive and retain
possession of all or part of the Mortgage Files, which failure persists to this day. See
Exhibit B, at 28-31.
56. The Attorneys General of both New York and Delaware recently
requested information from Defendant to determine whether the Trusts for which
3
Abigail Field, At Bank of America, More Incomplete Mortgage Docs Raise More
Questions, FORTUNE, June 3, 2011. Available at http://bit.ly/kZJfGn.
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Defendant served as Trustee “were properly documented and valid”. 4 The Attorney
dated August 4, 2011, in the Article 77 Proceeding, attached as “Exhibit E,” which
alleges that Defendant not only knew Mortgage Files were not transferred properly
(¶¶ 23-28), but also breached its duty to notify Certificateholders like the Plaintiffs of this
57. For older Trusts, the Master Servicer, consistent with contractual
obligations, annually and at its own expense causes a nationally or regionally recognized
Certified Public Accountants) to furnish a statement to Defendant that the firm has
examined certain documents and records relating to the servicing of the Mortgage Loans
and that, on the basis of that examination, the servicing has been conducted in
compliance with the Master Servicer’s contractual obligations, with any significant
58. For newer Trusts, the Master Servicer and the Trustee annually must
For the Trustee, the Servicing Criteria Assessments include pool asset administration
4
Gretchen Morgensen, Two States Ask if Paperwork in Mortgage Bundling Was
Complete, NEW YORK TIMES, June 12, 2011. Available at http://nyti.ms/laGDUf.
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Id. § 229.1122(d)(4). For newer Trusts, the Depositor must file the Servicing Criteria
Assessments with the SEC, and the SEC makes them available for public viewing by
59. In addition, under Regulation AB and the related PSA, the Trustee’s and
Master Servicer’s registered public accounting firms must deliver separate attestation
60. For each newer Trust, the Trustee and Master Servicer filed Servicing
the Trustee’s compliance with requirements that “pool assets and related documents [be]
pool assets [be] maintained as required by transaction documents…” The Trustee and
Master Servicer also asserted that they were “in material compliance with the Applicable
Servicing Criteria” as part of Accountant Attestation Reports executed and filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission in accordance with the Trusts’ PSAs and
Regulation AB.
61. As set forth elsewhere in this Complaint, the Trustee’s and Master
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Attestation reports, were untrue, inaccurate, and misleading in failing to report material
annual report of an independent accounting firm pursuant to the terms of certain PSAs,
but Defendant has not shared with Certificateholders at large findings regarding any
63. Some PSAs require the Trustee to provide the independent accounting
firm’s annual report to any Certificateholder who requests it. Based on the Affidavit of a
representative of a Certificateholder in another trust, the Trustee does not provide the
Renee D. Hertzler, an employee of the Master Servicer, admitted under oath to signing
seven to eight thousand legal documents a month outside the presence of a notary and
without reviewing the documents prior to signing them. Ms. Hertzler testified: “I
typically don’t read them because of the volume that we sign.” Ms. Hertzler further
admitted to signing affidavits as the Vice President of Defendant BNYM when, in fact,
65. Tam Doan worked on pre-sale foreclosures for the Master Servicer in
Southern California. While his job required him to sign various legal documents, he
primarily handled notices to delinquent borrowers that their loans were proceeding to
foreclosure. His signature constituted an affirmation that the Master Servicer had
reviewed the loan and it did not qualify for modification. Yet, Mr. Doan told CNN: “We
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had no knowledge of whether the foreclosure could proceed or couldn't, but regardless,
we signed the documents to get these foreclosures out of the way.” In some cases, he
claimed, he did not even know what kind of document he was signing. “I had no idea
what I was signing,” said Doan. “Either you were in or you were out.” 5
swearing to personal knowledge of facts that the affiant has not even reviewed has
POST article dated September 30, 2010, quoted John Walsh, acting director of the Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency, as telling lawmakers that some lenders “clearly had
Master Servicer, were ordered to review their foreclosure processes. 7 In her testimony
before this same Congressional panel, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Chairman
Sheila C. Bair described the issue of document processing errors as “troubling.” She also
said “it’s just a further indication of how wrong we went with the mortgage origination
5
http://bit.ly/q4ISRp.
6
The transcripts of the Senate Banking Committee Hearing on Financial
Overhaul can be found at http://1.usa.gov/9XkhWP, while the hearing video can be
viewed at http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/OverhaulI.
7
Ariana E. Cha, 7 Major Lenders Ordered to Review Foreclosure Procedures,
WASHINGTON POST, Sept. 30, 2010. Available at http://wapo.st/bsCe3N.
8
Ariana E. Cha, Lenders Told to Review Foreclosure Procedures, WASHINGTON
POST, Oct. 1, 2010. Available at http://wapo.st/d9z6KS.
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68. On October 1, 2010, the Master Servicer announced that it was putting
Servicer’s spokesman Dan Frahm: “To be certain affidavits have followed the correct
procedures, Bank of America will delay the process in order to amend all affidavits in
69. In early October 2010, Attorneys General in numerous states called for
expanded foreclosure moratoriums, and then-New York Attorney General and now
Governor Andrew Cuomo began an investigation of the issue. 10 Shortly thereafter, the
Attorneys General from all 50 states formed the Mortgage Foreclosure Multistate Group,
and in a joint statement, opined that robo-signing “may constitute a deceptive act and/or
70. On October 8, 2010, the Master Servicer responded to the calls for an
America has extended our review of foreclosure documents to all fifty states. We will
stop foreclosure sales until our assessment has been satisfactorily completed. Our
ongoing assessment shows the basis for our past foreclosure decisions is accurate. We
9
Ariana E. Cha, Bank of America Latest to Put Hold on Foreclosures Amid
Paperwork Concerns, WASHINGTON POST, Oct. 1, 2010. Available at
http://wapo.st/bNumWZ.
10
See, e.g., http://bit.ly/cNBCBX; http://bit.ly/rj49Uv; http://bloom.bg/d9TBzu;
http://1.usa.gov/prWSAc; http://bit.ly/quFw9c.
11
National Association of Attorneys General, Joint Statement of the Mortgage
Foreclosure Multistate Group, Oct. 13, 2010. Available at http://1.usa.gov/1fuOymH.
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continue to serve the interests of our customers, investors and communities. Providing
71. On October 18, 2010, the Master Servicer released the following
statement: “We have reviewed our process for resubmission of foreclosure affidavits in
the 23 judicial states with key stakeholders, including our largest investors. Accordingly,
Bank of America today began the process of preparing foreclosure affidavits for
that by Monday, Oct. 25, the first foreclosure affidavits will be resubmitted to the courts.
Upon judgment, foreclosure dates will be set and Bank of America will resume
72. However, on October 24, 2010, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL reported that
the Master Servicer admitted finding errors in ten to twenty-five out of the first several
hundred foreclosure files it examined. The mistakes included lack of signatures, missing
files, and inconsistent information about the property and the payment history. In
addition, a Master Servicer spokesman admitted that, rather than review all of the files for
accuracy, the Master Servicer only reviewed several hundred, which represents less than
POST quoted Master Servicer spokesman Dan Frahm as stating: “We never said that our
12
Bank of America Halts Foreclosure Sales in All 50 States, PBS NEWSHOUR,
Oct. 8, 2010. Available at http://to.pbs.org/cjNgih.
13
Available at http://bit.ly/19TmJn4. The states where foreclosures were
suspended are: Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North
Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Vermont, and
Wisconsin.
14
Dan Fitzpatrick, BofA Finds Foreclosure Document Errors, WALL STREET
JOURNAL, Oct. 24, 2010. Available at http://on.wsj.com/19xC5Ji.
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review tested each of these previously filed affidavits in these 102,000 proceedings.”15
whether the foreclosures were fully compliant with law. During the fourth quarter of
2010, the Office of Comptroller of the Currency, the Office of Thrift Supervision, the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Federal Reserve Board undertook a
federally regulated mortgage servicers, including the Master Servicer. As John Walsh,
Acting Comptroller of the Currency, testified before the Senate Committee on Banking,
73. On April 13, 2011, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
“announced formal enforcement actions against eight national bank mortgage servicers
[including the Master Servicer] and two third-party servicer providers for unsafe and
15
Zachary A. Goldfarb, Warning Signs of Foreclosure Crisis Were Ignored, Says
FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair, WASHINGTON POST, Oct. 25, 2010. Available at
http://wapo.st/dsXvXn.
16
Written testimony available at http://1.usa.gov/pcJlpq.
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processing.” 17 On that same date, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency signed
and published a consent order styled In the Matter of Bank of America, N.A. (the
“Consent Order”), 18 which found that the Master Servicer “engaged in unsafe or unsound
17
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, News Release, OCC Takes
Enforcement Action Against Eight Servicers for Unsafe and Unsound Foreclosure
Practices, Apr. 13, 2011. Available at http://1.usa.gov/pa91Xx.
18
The Consent Order is available at http://1.usa.gov/1fuWch5.
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74. In May 2011, the Guilford County, North Carolina, Register of Deeds
surveyed various recorded documents filed with his office. The Register of Deeds found
scores of filings in the name of Bank of America, N.A. signed by Christie Baldwin and in
the name of Bank of New York Trust Company, N.A. signed by Pat Kingston, who also
signed for numerous other entities, including EMC Mortgage Corp., Citi Residential
Lending Inc., Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems Inc., and Wells Fargo Bank,
N.A. “Pat Kingston” and “Christie Baldwin” respectively used eight and twelve different
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75. On May 20, 2011, the Connecticut Attorney General sent a letter to the
Master Servicer regarding the “numerous complaints from consumers whose loans are
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and a clear indication that Bank of America has not devoted sufficient
resources toward addressing its well-documented default servicing
problems.
http://www.ct.gov/ag/lib/ag/press_releases/2011/brianmoynihanboa_.pdf
The bank didn’t respond to questions about why Burton’s name has been
signed in different ways or why her signature appeared on documents that
investigators in at least two states have deemed invalid.
O’Brien says the bank’s actions show “consciousness of guilt.” Earlier this
year, he hired Marie McDonnell, a mortgage fraud investigator and
forensic document analyst, to verify his suspicions about Burton’s and
other names on suspect paperwork.
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Examples of the Master Servicer’s latest robo-signed documents include the following
signatures:
77. Similarly, Reuters published a special report on July 19, 2011, in which it
claimed that five mortgage loan servicers, including Bank of America, had filed
foreclosure documents of questionable validity since agreeing to stop doing so earlier this
year. Reuters went on to describe an incident only a week earlier in which Robert Drain,
United States Bankruptcy Judge for the Southern District of New York:
19
Michelle Conlin, AP Exclusive: Mortgage ‘Robo-signing’ Goes On,
ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 18, 2011. Available at http://apne.ws/mYIUus.
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78. Defendant’s failure to possess the complete Mortgage File and properly
execute assignments has prevented, obstructed, delayed, and/or increased the expense of
79. The nation’s courts have responded to the servicers’ notoriously flawed
80. Due to Defendant’s failings, no foreclosure can take place at the cost
anticipated when Plaintiffs invested in the Trusts because the cost of preparing
20
Scot J. Paltrow, Special Report: Banks Still Robo-signing, REUTERS, July 19,
2011. Available at http://t.co/0BmGkVH.
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with foreclosures. Such expenses include, but are not limited to: (1) sanctions for
misconduct in legal proceedings; (2) attorneys’ fees and costs of filing a foreclosure
complaint dismissed or delayed due to improper documentation; (3) attorneys’ fees and
other professional fees related to defenses against government investigations and claims;
(5) costs of evaluating servicing procedures to ensure compliance with law; (6) the
judgments related to this issue; (7) increased costs of future foreclosures; and
(8) “carrying costs” associated with delaying Valid Foreclosures such as force-placed
82. When a homeowner loses a home to foreclosure, title to the home passes
to the lender before the property is marketed and sold to a third party. At this stage in the
process, the property is called “Real Estate Owned” (i.e., real estate owned by the
lender). During this time, the property is typically vacant – the homeowner no longer
lives at the property. Real Estate Owned has certain “costs of carry,” which are necessary
to preserve the value of the property and get the best possible price from a buyer to
reduce the deficiency owed by the borrower and maximize the return to the Trust. Such
83. Further, once a property becomes Real Estate Owned, it cannot be allowed
to deteriorate so that it becomes unsellable and a public nuisance. Such practices damage
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both the borrower and the investor by increasing the deficiency owed by the borrower on
the loan and the loss associated with the property, as well as the community at large.
complaint in a case styled City of Buffalo v. ABN AMRO Mortgage Group, Inc., Case No.
2008002200 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. Feb. 20, 2008) (“Buffalo Complaint”), which states at
paragraph 117 that Bank of New York Trust was “granted a judgment of foreclosure for
the property know[n] as 508 Dodge in the City of Buffalo, New York and thereby was
the owner, occupant, mortgagee in possession, equitable owner, or that which exercised
dominion and control over said property” and adds at paragraph 120 “on information and
belief” that “Defendant Bank of New York permitted, suffered and allowed the aforesaid
and/or decayed so as to present a danger to the health, safety and welfare of the public.”
Buffalo Complaint ¶¶ 109-114. Similar allegations are made against the parent of the
REO property that sits vacant and boarded up for a year after a foreclosure sale is far
more damaging than that of a property that is quickly fixed up and sold at an affordable
price to a homebuyer. […] The magnitude of that impact, as noted above, is largely a
function of how long the property sat vacant prior to resale. The shorter the period from
initial notice to foreclosure sale, and from then until the property is resold and
21
Alan Mallach, REO Properties, Housing Markets, and the Shadow Inventory,
REO AND VACANT PROPERTIES: STRATEGIES FOR NEIGHBORHOOD STABILIZATION
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Stabilization Trust, a “quick sale” of Real Estate Owned property “means lower carrying
and marketing costs, less property deterioration and vandalism, and other savings.” 22
87. To obtain maximum value for an REO property, the Trust must be able to
assure the purchaser that the Trust has good and marketable title to the property.
88. The inability to assure the purchaser that the Trust has good and
marketable title to the property greatly suppresses the value the Trust can obtain for the
property.
89. To the extent that title insurance can be obtained on the sale of an REO
property, title insurers now must perform significant additional diligence, which increases
the time that the Trust must hold the REO property even after a potential purchaser has
90. Defendant’s failure to receive, process, retain, and hold the Mortgage Files
in accordance with the PSA calls into question title on REO properties that have been
sold, as well as current and future REO inventory. Defendant’s failures have caused
Plaintiffs direct damages, including: (1) potential liability on already-sold REO property
from borrowers, purchasers, and title insurers; (2) suppressed values of and/or the
inability to sell REO property due to suspected or actual title defects; (3) increased
expenses to remedy and/or insure against potential purchaser title defects; and
(Federal Reserve Banks of Boston and Cleveland and the Federal Reserve Board), Sept.
2010, at 16.
22
Craig Nickerson, Acquiring Property for Neighborhood Stabilization: Lessons
Learned from the Front Lines, REO AND VACANT PROPERTIES: STRATEGIES FOR
NEIGHBORHOOD STABILIZATION (Federal Reserve Banks of Boston and Cleveland and the
Federal Reserve Board), Sept. 2010, at 92.
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(4) reduced property values and/or increased costs of carry due to longer timelines
The U.S. Internal Revenue Service has launched a review of the tax-
exempt status of a widely-held form of mortgage-backed securities called
REMICs.
Should the IRS find reason to take tough action, the financial impact could
be enormous. REMIC investments are held by pension funds, in individual
retirement plans such as 401(k)s and by state and local government
entities.
The statement said the IRS would not make any further comment. An IRS
spokesman declined to say anything about the extent of the review, or
whether the agency is likely to take action.
The review, however, is a sign that the widespread bank misdeeds in home
foreclosure cases are spilling over to threaten the interests of investors in
mortgage-backed securities. The banks originated the mortgages and
packaged them into securities.
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These investment trusts already have suffered big drops in income because
of vast numbers of mortgage defaults after the housing boom collapse.
They have been hurt too because in an increasing number of instances they
have been blocked by courts from foreclosing on defaulted mortgages.
The courts ruled that because the trusts never received the required
documents establishing that they owned the mortgages, they have no
standing to foreclose.
For investors, one of the big attractions of REMICs has been that they
aren’t “double-taxed.” While individual investors pay taxes on income
they receive from REMICs, the securities themselves are exempt from
business income tax.
But if the IRS concludes that the REMIC investments failed to comply
with strict requirements in the federal tax code, the REMIC would have to
pay a 100 percent tax on the income from those investments.
That means that the IRS could confiscate the full amount. Tax law experts
said the REMICs also could be subjected to additional penalties for failing
to file tax returns on the income. 23
92. The people of the United States have long supported members of the
United States Armed Forces. One means of demonstrating this support is to protect active
93. According to Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil
The men and women who serve our nation in the armed forces deserve, at
the very least, to know that they will not have their homes taken from
them wrongfully while they are bravely putting their lives on the line on
behalf of their country. […] All lenders have an obligation to do their part
23
Scot J. Paltrow, IRS Weighs Tax Penalties on Mortgage Securities, REUTERS,
April 27, 2011. Available at http://reut.rs/kPqOnE.
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to work with servicemembers while these brave men and women focus on
keeping us safe. 24
94. To support this policy, Congress enacted the Servicemembers Civil Relief
Act (SCRA) (formerly the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act), which, among other
95. On May 26, 2011, the United States Department of Justice announced that
the Master Servicer “will pay $20 million to resolve a lawsuit alleging that Countrywide
foreclosed on approximately 160 servicemembers between January 2006 and May 2009
without court orders.” The complaint supporting the lawsuit “alleges that Countrywide
did not consistently check the military status of borrowers on whom it foreclosed through
96. In announcing the settlement, André Birotte Jr, United States Attorney for
Countrywide Home Loans failed to protect and respect the rights of our
servicemembers, failed to comply with clearly mandated procedures and
foreclosed against homeowners who are valiantly serving our
nation…. Military families lost their homes when Countrywide violated
the law, causing undue stress to wartime personnel who have been
protected from such actions since the Civil War. 26
97. James T. Jacks, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Texas,
added:
With the numerous sacrifices our servicemembers make while they are
serving our country, the last thing they need to worry about is whether or
not their families will be forced from their homes. These lenders’ callous
disregard for the SCRA, a law which was designed to insulate these
24
Press Release, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Justice Department Settles with Bank of
America and Saxon Mortgage for Illegally Foreclosing on Servicemembers (May 26,
2011). Available at http://1.usa.gov/1brBeyN.
25
Id.
26
Id.
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98. Allegations that the Master Servicer engages in illicit foreclosures are not
Florida court found that the Master Servicer wrongfully tried to foreclose on a Florida
couple. The court found that the couple, who bought the house for cash, did not even
have a mortgage. The court ordered the Master Servicer to pay the couple’s legal fees,
but, for more than five months, the Master Servicer failed to comply with the court’s
order. Finally, on or about June 5, 2011, the couple foreclosed on a Bank of America
branch, showing up with their attorney and a deputy sheriff, seizing property, and locking
out a “visibly shaken” bank manager for about an hour until he presented the couple with
a check for their legal fees. “They’ve ignored our calls, ignored our letters, legally this is
the next step to get my clients compensated,” said the couple’s attorney.
99. The fees, costs, and liabilities associated with wrongful foreclosures
June 7, 2010, styled Federal Trade Commission v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. and
BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP, Case No. CV-10-4193 (C.D. Cal.) (the “FTC
Complaint”), the Master Servicer engaged in “unlawful acts and practices” “in servicing
distress who are struggling to keep their homes.” As with the loans in each Trust,
“[m]any of the loans serviced by Defendants are risky, high-cost loans that had been
27
Id.
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101. According to the FTC Complaint ¶ 15: “The scheme works as follows.
Defendants order default-related services from the default subsidiaries, which in turn
obtain the services from third-party vendors. The default subsidiaries then charge
Defendants a fee significantly marked up from the third-party vendors' fee for the service,
and the Defendants, in turn, assess and collect these marked-up fees from borrowers.”
102. The FTC Complaint ¶ 15 quotes the President, Chief Operating Officer,
Now, we are frequently asked what the impact of our servicing costs and
earnings will be from increased delinquencies and [loss] mitigation efforts,
and what happens to costs. And what we point out is, as I will now, is that
increased operating expenses in times like this tend to be fully offset by
increases in ancillary income in our servicing operation, greater fee
income from items like late charges, and importantly from in-sourced
vendor functions that represent part of our diversification strategy, a
counter-cyclical diversification strategy such as our businesses involved in
foreclosure trustee and default title services and property inspection
services.
which the Master Servicer charged for default-related services: “Countrywide Field
Services Corporation (‘CFSC’), now doing business as BAC Field Services Corporation,
loans. Until at least July 1, 2008, CFSC was a subsidiary of Defendant CHL. Defendants
order property inspections and property preservation services, such as lawn cuts, from
CFSC, which in turn orders the services from third-party vendors. The vendors charge
CFSC prices for the performance of these services, which prices CFSC then marks up in
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then charge the marked-up fees to the borrower. Defendants collect these marked-up fees
from borrowers through various means, including in connection with repayment plans,
104. The FTC Complaint ¶ 19 details other examples of the manner in which
the Master Servicer on each Trust charged for default-related services: “Defendants
obtain services through other default subsidiaries in similar fashion and then charge
borrowers fees for default services that are substantially marked up from the actual cost
of the services. These other default subsidiaries are LandSafe Default, Inc., also known as
(“ReconTrust”). Defendants order pre-foreclosure title reports from LandSafe at the very
billed for it, and Defendants send the report with the foreclosure referral to a foreclosure
title services and then “charges” fees to Defendants for those services that are
foreclosure trustee services that have been substantially marked up from the actual cost of
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105. The Utah Attorney General has “determined that ReconTrust, N.A., is not
in compliance with Utah Code §§ 57-1-21(3) and 57-1-23 when conducting real estate
106. According to the Utah Attorney General, “Utah Code §§ 57-1-21(3) and
57-1-23 provide that the only valid trustees of trust deeds with the ‘power of sale’ are
those who are either members of the Utah State Bar or title insurance companies.
ReconTrust in the State of Utah are not in compliance with Utah’s statutes, and are hence
illegal.” 29
107. The FTC Complaint omits one other method by which the Master Servicer
can collect for these marked-up services: by charging them to a Trust and its beneficiaries
108. In the most common instance, the borrower in default on the loan lacks
sufficient funds to pay the Master Servicer for these charges. Therefore, the Master
Servicer takes its reimbursement for the default-related services from the amount
recovered from the foreclosure sale of the home, which reduces the amount to be
provided with a deficiency claim against the borrower for these default-related services,
28
Letter from Utah Attorney General to Bank of America, May 19, 2011.
29
Id.
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109. Unfortunately, the detail of these charges is not reported in a manner that
allows each Trust’s beneficiaries to discern whether or not the Trust fund is incurring
110. The FTC Complaint ¶ 17 alleges that the charges for default services
violate the borrower’s loan documents: “In charging marked-up fees for default services,
Defendants have violated the mortgage contract by charging borrowers for default
services that exceed the actual cost of the services and that are not reasonable and
appropriate to protect the note holder’s interest in the property and rights under the
security instrument. In addition, Defendants have charged borrowers for the performance
of default services, such as property inspections and title reports, that in some instances
were not reasonable and appropriate to protect the note holder’s interest in the property
111. Any inflated fees charged by the Master Servicer for default-related
services are neither customary, nor reasonable, nor necessary, and reflect more than the
112. Based on the information presented above, each Trust has been charged
for these marked-up default-related services, and the Trusts could suffer further harm in
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[…]
[…]
inflated rates damages Plaintiffs and other investors in the Trusts in two ways. First,
30
Jeff Horwitz, Ties to Insurers Could Land Mortgage Servicers in More Trouble,
AMERICAN BANKER, Nov. 9, 2010. Available at http://bit.ly/aw1KmF.
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borrower less likely to recover from the default and make payments on the loan. Second,
if the borrower fails to pay the exorbitant premium, as most do, then the Master Servicer
collects those payments from the proceeds of a foreclosure before passing the remaining
funds through to the Trust. By thus reducing the amount paid to each Trust from the
foreclosure sale, the Master Servicer has effectively charged its exorbitant premiums to
the Trust.
115. Further, well-respected analyst Laurie Goodman notes that “by extending
time to foreclosure, Bank of America/Countrywide are not only able to obtain hefty late
fees (which payment is at the top of the waterfall at liquidation; paid before investors
recover a single dime), but they are also profiting though their Balboa subsidiary [part of
116. Charges for unnecessary insurance coverage at inflated rates increases the
losses to investors associated with defaulted loans while benefiting the Master Servicer
117. The meltdown in the mortgage industry created significant uncertainty and
potential liability for the Trustee. Debra Baker, a senior managing director in the
Trustee’s Corporate Trust division, testified that in the summer of 2008 when the “market
downturn” began, there was “a lot of activity” within the Trustee “around setting up war
rooms, we called them at that time, just to make sure we understood any of our
exposures.” When asked who “our” referred to in that answer, Ms. Baker explained “[i]t
refers to Bank of New York Mellon[.]” The war room was a resource for the Trustee
31
AMHERST MORTGAGE INSIGHT, May 20, 2010, at 23.
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personnel and outside counsel, and was a “pretty rigorous setup in that there were people
there pretty much manning. There [were] hotlines set up, phones so people could call
118. From 2009 through 2011, the Trustee received numerous letters from
Certificateholders in the Countrywide trusts either alerting the Trustee to the massive
defaults in the Trusts, demanding that the Trustee take some action to curb
information that would enable them to take action on their own. Additional inquiries from
Certificateholders were also being received by the Trustee through telephone calls or e-
mails. Rather than provide Certificateholders with the information they requested and
complying with its fiduciary duties to its beneficiaries, the Trustee refused most of these
satisfied the threshold requirements under the PSAs to require the Trustee to take any
action.
Richard Stanley, a senior managing director for the Trustee, began holding daily
meetings with key structured finance businesspeople and representatives from the risk
and legal departments to ensure that issues were being properly escalated within the
Trustee. Shortly thereafter, Scott Posner, then-CEO of Corporate Trust, began holding
regular meetings at the senior executive level to similarly monitor investor inquiries and
related issues.
Investors”) began sending letters to the Trustee and its outside counsel at Pillsbury
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Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP. These letters, among other things, purported to instruct the
and warranties against Bank of America/Countrywide. The Trustee therefore did not give
these letters much attention. Instead, the Trustee followed its standard playbook by
making technical objections to the instruction letters and refusing to take any action.
121. In October 2010, the Inside Institutional Investors changed their strategy
by sending two letters that directly created risk for the Trustee. On October 18, 2010, the
Event of Default that would subject the Trustee to heightened duties and provide
expanded rights to Certificateholders. After that shot across the Trustee’s bow, the Inside
Institutional Investors then took dead aim at the Trustee. In a letter on October 22, 2010,
the Inside Institutional Investors asked the Trustee for evidence of compliance with its
own duties under the PSAs to ensure that loans with incomplete mortgage files (which
pose risks to investors because they often cannot be foreclosed on) were substituted for
loans with complete mortgage files, which is the subject of the present lawsuit.
122. The Trustee clearly understood that it now faced potential liability.
Douglas Chapman, a risk officer for the Trustee, recognized that these letters created
“downside risk . . . [that] could be significant” and could have cost the Trustee “a lot of
money.” Other Trustee representatives admitted they knew there was a possibility the
Trustee could be sued by the Certificateholders. In addition, the Trustee investigated its
own document custody operations, the failure of which would give rise to direct liability
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against the Trustee. Early in settlement negotiations with Bank of America, the Trustee
sought to ensure that the settlement would “resolve trustee certification issues, such as …
123. Facing the prospects of heightened duties and direct liability for its own
Pillsbury. The Trustee hired Mayer Brown LLP, and specifically, dealmaker Jason
Kravitt to work more “constructively” with Ms. Patrick and the Inside Institutional
Investors. Mr. Kravitt and his firm already had relationships with many of the parties
involved in the matter, including Bank of America, whom Mr. Kravitt considered a “good
client.”
124. The Trustee, like Mayer Brown and Mr. Kravitt, had an ongoing business
relationship with Bank of America. Bank of America was one of the Trustee’s largest
clients and accounted for over half of the Trustee’s mortgage-backed securities business.
Even during settlement talks, the Trustee was attempting to generate additional revenue
from Bank of America, including through a meeting of high-level BNYM and Bank of
America personnel.
125. Once the Inside Institutional Investors placed direct pressure on the
Trustee, and Mayer Brown stepped in, matters moved quickly towards settlement. In the
summer of 2010, the Trustee took over six weeks to arrange a meeting in New York with
the Inside Institutional Investors after that group specifically requested a meeting. But
after receiving Gibbs & Bruns’s October 22 letter, Jason Kravitt, Mayer Brown’s lead
negotiator, flew to Houston to meet with Ms. Patrick a week and a half later.
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duties and the Certificateholders receive additional rights. Specifically, the Trustee is
obligated to give notice to all Certificateholders of the Event of Default and is held to the
standard of a prudent person in the conduct of his own affairs. Certificateholders benefit
from receiving notice of an Event of Default and from having a Trustee subject to
heightened duties. Certificateholders are also able to demand that the Trustee initiate
action against the Master Servicer to cure the Event of Default. If the Trustee fails to take
action or otherwise fails to act prudently, the Certificateholders can sue the Master
Servicer directly.
127. In December 2010, as the 60-day clock started by the Inside Institutional
Investors’ October 18, 2010 Notice of Non-Performance continued to run, the Trustee
undertook to ensure that these heightened duties and expanded rights would never take
America and the Inside Institutional Investors in an attempt to protect both banks from
the effects of an Event of Default. The resulting agreement was renewed approximately
every two months during the course of the settlement negotiations. The forbearance
the Trustee's heightened duties, ensuring valuable Certificateholder rights are not
triggered, and buying Bank of America more time to structure a favorable deal without
128. In an early draft of the forbearance agreement, Gibbs & Bruns asserted
that the agreement would only prevent their investor group from taking action to initiate a
suit against Bank of America, but would not prevent the Event of Default from occurring.
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Under this formulation, Certificateholders would have received notice of the Event of
Default from the Trustee, would have received the benefit of having a Trustee subject to a
higher standard of conduct, and would have been able to avail themselves of their right to
129. The Trustee and Bank of America, however, attempted to prevent the
occurrence of an Event of Default. Jason Kravitt explained his response to Gibbs &
Bruns’ position in an e-mail to Bank of America’s counsel at Wachtell: “I put a call into
Kathy and shot her an email saying that all I wanted to do is change ‘extend’ in the first
sentence of item 1. to ‘toll’. The letter should prevent an EOD [Event of Default] from
occurring for a period of time; not tie one group of CHs [‘Certificateholders’] hands with
was adopted.
130. As noted, an Event of Default requires the Trustee to give notice of the
trust law which recognizes that a trustee’s duties change post-default. See, e.g., Beck v.
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co., 218 A.D.2d 1, 12 (1st Dep’t 1995) (“The reality
represent only a relatively small portion of a large issue, will, as a practical matter, be
unable to act effectively to guard against the further impairment of their economic
interests, and although those interests may be relatively small when compared to the
entire issue, they may nevertheless be, and often are, extremely substantial in the context
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131. Here, not only did Certificateholders never receive notice of an actual or
potential Event of Default, the Trustee “did not send out a formal notice to certificate
holders until the proposed settlement was agreed to.” The lack of notice was the result of
a conscious decision made by the Trustee to exclude other Certificateholders and avoid
132. The Trustee’s decision not to provide notice here was also a departure
from its standard practice. Robert Griffin, a managing director for the Trustee, testified
that he could not recall an instance in which the Trustee “agreed to extinguish claims to
which certificateholders had rights without first notifying the certificateholders of that
the Inside Institutional Investors were requesting that they be appointed on a contingency
fee basis to investigate representation and warranty breaches, the Trustee’s then-counsel
at Pillsbury responded by noting: “The Trustee does not customarily engage counsel on a
contingent fee basis and would want, at a minimum, to notice all certificateholders of the
proposed engagement to enable them to express any concerns that they might have.”
Certificateholders concerning the ongoing discussions with Bank of America and the
Inside Institutional Investors, but Bank of America’s attorneys expressed a concern that
“if a notice was going to be in the form of inviting each and every or any and all
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on chaos to have a group in the hundreds or so step forward as a result of such a notice.”
Kravitt agreed, and on behalf of the Trustee offered to forego providing notice to
134. In a ruling in the Article 77 Proceeding, the court ultimately approved the
proposed settlement in some respects, but held that the Defendant “abused its discretion”
release loan modification claims (the “Loan Modification Claims”) as part of the
settlement “without investigating their potential worth or strength.” Case No. 651786/11,
135. The PSAs for the trusts at issue in the Article 77 Proceeding (including 67
out of 93 of the Trusts at issue in this case) in most instances require immediate
repurchase of loans that are modified (applicable to 11 of the Trusts at issue) or modified
Claims for all trusts at issue in the Article 77 Proceeding amounted to over $30 billion,
but despite this, the Defendant attempted to compromise and release these claims for zero
Kapnick declined to approve the proposed settlement with respect to these claims, finding
that the Defendant “abused its discretion” and “acted unreasonably or beyond the bounds
of reasonable judgment.” Id. This abuse of discretion began during the Defendant’s
settlement negotiations with Bank of America and continued through the Article 77
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136. Plaintiffs’ damages are direct, and not derivative, because Plaintiffs have
not simply been harmed by a de-valuation of their Certificates or some amorphous harm
to the Trust itself, but by a specific loss of cash flow that is unique to each of the
137. Plaintiffs, nonetheless, shall take all steps necessary to make certain that
the rights of other Certificateholders are protected to the extent Plaintiffs are required to
138. Although Plaintiffs’ damages are direct, should any Court determine that
its damages were derivative, then Plaintiffs will proceed in this action on behalf of the
entire Trust and/or all similarly situated Certificateholders. Further, as the relevant case
law provides, demand on the trustee to sue itself is futile and should be excused.
and make the following allegations on information and belief on the basis set forth in the
140. All of the PSAs for the Trusts at issue in this action and identified above
141. The Defendant included the Trusts formed after January 1, 2004, in its
proposed settlement in the Article 77 Proceeding. See Exhibit A (list of covered trusts) to
Proposed Settlement Agreement (attached hereto as Exhibit B). The Defendant was also
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aware that its servicer breached the PSA, yet did nothing to prevent or mitigate the
servicer’s breaches.
C”. The PSAs establish the Trust and appoint the Trustee for the benefit of investors.
143. The PSAs are contracts. The PSAs created the mechanism for investment
Such a trust imposes detailed provisions for the administration of the loans. Plaintiffs’
investments in the Trusts included not only the right to receive income from mortgage
payments, but also the right to have the mortgage loans serviced and administered in
accordance with the PSAs. In addition to the servicing and administering by the Master
holding the corpuses of the Trusts and the Mortgage Files, reporting to the investors, and
giving notice to the Master Servicer of any Event of Default under the PSA.
144. Defendant entered into the PSAs for the benefit of Certificateholders.
Plaintiffs are Certificateholders in, and thus beneficiaries of, the Trusts. See, e.g., PSA
§ 2.01(b) (“Immediately upon the conveyance of the Initial Mortgage Loans referred to in
clause (a), the Depositor sells, transfers, assigns, sets over and otherwise conveys to the
Trustee for the benefit of the Certificateholders, without recourse, all the right, title and
interest of the Depositor in and to the Trust Fund…”); PSA § 2.01(c) (“[T]he Depositor
has delivered or caused to be delivered to the Trustee … for the benefit of the
Loan …”); PSA § 2.02(a) (“The Trustee acknowledges receipt of the documents … and
declares that it holds and will hold such documents and the other documents delivered to
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it constituting the Mortgage Files, and that it holds or will hold such other assets as are
included in the Trust Fund, in trust for the exclusive use and benefit of all present and
pursuant to this Section 2.03 shall survive delivery of the respective Mortgage Files to the
Trustee for the benefit of the Certificateholders.”); PSA §2.06 (“The Trustee agrees to
hold the Trust Fund and exercise the rights referred to above for the benefit of all present
and future Holders of the Certificates and to perform the duties set forth in this
Agreement, to the end that the interest of the Holders of the Certificates may be
adequately and effectively protected.”). Further, the purpose of the PSAs was to facilitate
145. The foregoing makes Plaintiffs at least a third party beneficiary to each of
the PSAs and entitles Plaintiffs to seek redress for breach of their contractual rights.
146. On the inception date of each PSA, Defendant failed to perform its
fundamental obligation to obtain and hold the corpus of each Trust, including the
Mortgage Files.
147. The PSA clearly requires that the Trustee obtain the trust corpus in
exchange for the certificates. See PSA at vi (“The Depositor is the owner of the Trust
Fund that is hereby conveyed to the Trustee in return for the Certificates.”); PSA § 2.06
(“The Trustee acknowledges the transfer and assignment to it of the Trust Fund and,
concurrently with such transfer and assignment, has executed and delivered to or upon
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148. The Trustee promised that it will maintain possession of the Mortgage
Notes (not just those Mortgage Notes delivered to it) and that it holds or will hold the
entirety of the Trust Fund. PSA § 2.02(i) (“The Trustee acknowledges that it will
maintain possession of the Mortgage Notes in the State of California, unless otherwise
permitted by the Rating Agencies.”); PSA § 2.06 (“The Trustee agrees to hold the Trust
Fund and exercise the rights referred to above for the benefit of all present and future
Holders of the Certificates….“); see also PSA § 2.02(a) (“The Trustee acknowledges
receipt of the documents identified in the Initial Certification in the form annexed hereto
as Exhibit F-1 and declares that it holds and will hold such documents and the other
documents delivered to it constituting the Mortgage Files, and that it holds or will hold
such other assets as are included in the Trust Fund, in trust for the exclusive use and
benefit of all present and future Certificateholders.”); PSA § 2.02(b) (“Upon delivery of
Certification in the form annexed hereto as Exhibit F-2 and declare that it will hold such
documents and the other documents delivered to it constituting the Mortgage Files, and
that it will hold such other assets as are included in the Trust Fund, in trust for the
exclusive use and benefit of all present and future Certificateholders.”) (emphasis added).
149. Further, the Trustee agreed to receive and hold critical documents
evidencing each Mortgage Loan, including the “Mortgage File,” which encompasses the
mortgage, the note and assignments. PSA § 2.01(c) and § 2.02(a), quoted supra ¶¶ 42-3
and 45-6; PSA §§ 2.02(d), 2.03(c), 3.12, 3.13, quoted supra ¶ 47; § 10.04(b) and
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150. Without the promissory notes and valid assignments of those notes to
Defendant, along with the associated mortgages, Defendant did not receive the Trust
corpus.
Defendant’s widespread failure to obtain and hold the Mortgage Files. See supra ¶¶ 49-
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which found that such practices often involved
demonstrated that the Trustee failed to obtain the Mortgage Files as required under the
153. The controversy caused by robo-signing and the questions it raised about
“proper ownership of the underlying mortgages as set out in federal tax law,” caused the
IRS to launch a review of the tax exempt status of trusts such as those at issue here. See
supra ¶ 91.
154. The Inside Institutional Investors represented by Gibbs & Bruns in the
Article 77 Proceeding asserted the Trustee’s failure to obtain Mortgage Files in a letter
dated October 18, 2010, attached as “Exhibit G”. Specifically, the letter stated that the
“loan and collateral files” were not “accurate and adequate” for proper servicing and that
there was no effort to “cure deficiencies in mortgage records when deficient loan files
Institutional Investors asserted servicer breaches of the PSA § 3.01 by: “(i) failing to
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maintain accurate and adequate loan and collateral files in a manner consistent with
prudent mortgage servicing standards; (ii) failing to demand that the Sellers cure
deficiencies in mortgage records; (iii) incurring avoidable and unnecessary servicing fees
Exhibit F at 11. Such allegations necessarily implicate the Defendant’s failure as Trustee
inventory the documents in each Mortgage File, something that would be difficult in the
originally specified time frame if the Trustee held the Mortgage Files. Such provision is
an admission that Defendant failed to obtain and hold the complete Mortgage Files. See
supra ¶ 55.
157. The Master Servicer is benefiting from the Trusts’ corpuses at the expense
of Trust beneficiaries. See supra ¶¶ 49-116. Thus, Defendant is not holding the
Mortgage Loans for the exclusive use and benefit of the Certificateholders. PSA
§ 2.02(a).
158. The Trustee breached PSA §§ 2.01(c), 2.02(a), 2.02(b), 2.02(d), 2.03(c),
2.06, 3.12, 3.13, 8.01, 10.4(b) and 10.04(c) by failing to obtain and hold the Mortgage
Files and Mortgage Loans for the benefit of the Trusts’ beneficiaries.
159. Defendant failed to perform its obligations to review the Mortgage Files.
160. PSA § 2.02(i) requires that the Trustee perform “a review and
examination” of the Mortgage Files and determine what documents for each Mortgage
Loan were in its possession. Additionally, the Trustee was obligated to provide on the
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“Closing Date” an “Initial Certification” stating for each Mortgage Loan that the Trustee
had received the original Mortgage Note endorsed in blank and an executed assignment
and Exhibit F-1. The Trustee was further obligated on the thirtieth day after the Closing
documents and a list of exceptions. PSA § 2.02(i) and Exhibit G-1. Ninety days after the
Closing Date, the Trustee was to deliver a “Final Certification” as to Mortgage File
documents, “with any applicable exceptions noted thereon.” PSA § 2.02(i) and Exhibit
H-1.
161. The PSA requires the Trustee to inspect all documents delivered to it to
determine if they are in the proper form. PSA § 8.01 (“The Trustee, upon receipt of all
pursuant to any provision of this Agreement shall examine them to determine whether
they are in the form required by this Agreement; provided, however, that the Trustee shall
not be responsible for the accuracy or content of any such resolution, certificate,
Mortgage. PSA § 2.01(c) (“As promptly as practicable subsequent to such transfer and
assignment, and in any event, within one hundred twenty (120) days thereafter, the
Trustee shall (A) as the assignee thereof, affix the following language to each assignment
of Mortgage: “CWALT Series 2007-25, The Bank of New York, as trustee”, (B) cause
such assignment to be in proper form for recording in the appropriate public office for
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real property records….”). To avoid doubt, Plaintiffs allege that Defendant failed to affix
this language both on assignments generally and also on any assignments that were
delivered to Defendant.
inventory the Mortgage Files and make accurate certifications as to its receipt of the
accurate inventory, Defendant breached certain notice provisions as set forth below.
165. The Depositor assigned to the Trustee the Depositor’s right to require
assigns, transfers and conveys to the Trustee all of its rights with respect to the Mortgage
Loans including, without limitation, the representations and warranties of each Seller
made pursuant to Section 2.03(a)(ii) hereof, together with all rights of the Depositor to
require each Seller to cure any breach thereof or to repurchase or substitute for any
166. To the extent documents are missing from the Mortgage File or are not
accomplished in the manner and subject to the conditions set forth in PSA § 2.03(c). PSA
§ 2.01(c) (“Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, within thirty (30)
days after the Closing Date with respect to the Initial Mortgage Loans, Countrywide (on
its own behalf and on behalf of Park Granada, Park Monaco and Park Sienna) shall either
(i) deliver to the Depositor, or at the Depositor's direction, to the Trustee or other
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designee of the Depositor the Mortgage File as required pursuant to this Section 2.01 for
each Delay Delivery Mortgage Loan or (ii) either (A) substitute a Substitute Mortgage
Loan for the Delay Delivery Mortgage Loan or (B) repurchase the Delay Delivery
and subject to the conditions set forth in Section 2.03 (treating each Delay Delivery
Mortgage Loan as a Deleted Mortgage Loan for purposes of such Section 2.03);
provided, however, that if Countrywide fails to deliver a Mortgage File for any Delay
Delivery Mortgage Loan within the thirty (30) day period provided in the prior sentence,
Countrywide (on its own behalf and on behalf of Park Granada, Park Monaco and Park
Sienna) shall use its best reasonable efforts to effect a substitution, rather than a
repurchase of, such Deleted Mortgage Loan and provided further that the cure period
provided for in Section 2.02 or in Section 2.03 shall not apply to the initial delivery of the
Mortgage File for such Delay Delivery Mortgage Loan, but rather Countrywide (on its
own behalf and on behalf of Park Granada, Park Monaco and Park Sienna) shall have five
(5) Business Days to cure such failure to deliver. At the end of such thirty (30) day period
the Trustee shall send a Delay Delivery Certification for the Delay Delivery Mortgage
Loans delivered during such thirty (30) day period in accordance with the provisions of
Section 2.02.”).
and warranties discovered: (a) through the Trustee’s inventory of delivered (and
undelivered) documents; (b) in the Trustee’s Delay Delivery Certification; (c) in notices
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No. 09-CV-3994, 2010 WL 3656068 (C.D. Cal. Sept. 16, 2010); (e) In the Article 77
proceeding; (f) in the Consent Order and the related HUD OIG Memorandum No. 2012-
Charlotte, NC, dated March 12, 2012 (the “HUD OIG Memorandum”); and (g) when
loans in the Trusts went into default. PSA § 2.03(c) (“Upon discovery by any of the
to a Supplemental Mortgage Loan under Section 2.01(e)(i) that materially and adversely
affects the interests of the Certificateholders in that Mortgage Loan, the party discovering
such breach shall give prompt notice thereof to the other parties.”); PSA § 2.04 (“It is
understood and agreed that the representations and warranties set forth in this Section
2.04 shall survive delivery of the Mortgage Files to the Trustee. Upon discovery by the
warranties set forth in this Section 2.04 (referred to herein as a ‘breach’), which breach
materially and adversely affects the interest of the Certificateholders, the party
discovering such breach shall give prompt written notice to the others and to each Rating
Agency.”). Defendant further failed to pursue the remedies for those breaches provided
in the PSA for the benefit of the Certificateholders and to the end that those holders
would be adequately and effectively protected. PSA § 2.06 (“The Trustee agrees to hold
the Trust Fund and exercise the rights referred to above for the benefit of all present and
future Holders of the Certificates and to perform the duties set forth in this Agreement, to
the end that the interest of the Holders of the Certificates may be adequately and
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PSA and to then to “exercise such of the rights and powers vested in it by this
Agreement, and use the same degree of care and skill in their exercise as a prudent person
would exercise or use under the circumstances in the conduct of such person’s own
169. Section 7.01 of the PSA defines an “Event of Default” to include a failure
§ 7.01(ii).
170. Section 3.01 of the PSA requires the Master Servicer to follow “the
customary and usual standards of practice of prudent mortgage loan servicers” and to
“not take any action that is inconsistent with or prejudices the interests of the Trust Fund
or the Certificateholders in any Mortgage Loan or the rights and interests of the
Depositor, the Trustee and the Certificateholders under this Agreement. The Master
Servicer shall represent and protect the interests of the Trust Fund in the same manner as
it protects its own interests in mortgage loans in its own portfolio in any claim,
171. Paragraphs 50-117 above, set forth evidence that the Master Servicer
failed to properly service the mortgage loans by obtaining false reports attesting to its
borrowers for default-related services by the master servicer, and overcharging borrowers
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for “force-placed” insurance. Those paragraphs also detail the costs to the Trusts and
improper servicing.
servicing defaults via one or more letters from the law firm Gibbs & Bruns representing
various Certificateholders. The letters informed Defendant that the Master Servicer had
not enforced the obligation of the Sellers to cure outstanding breaches of document
defects and of representations and warranties. Such failure continued for more than sixty
days.
174. The October 18, 2010 letter specifically stated that the Master Servicer
had failed and refused to take actions in breach of its obligations set forth in §§ 2.03(c),
3.01, 3.11(a) and 3.14 of the PSAs. See “Exhibit G.” The letter continued that such
breaches materially and adversely affected the Certificateholders. Those breaches have
175. The Master Servicer’s improper servicing has continued for more than 60
176. The PSA explicitly requires that “[w]ithin 60 days after the occurrence of
any Event of Default, the Trustee shall transmit by mail to all Certificateholders notice of
each such Event of Default hereunder known to the Trustee, unless such Event of Default
177. The Trustee has not provided notice to the Certificateholders of any Event
of Default.
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178. The Trustee’s failure to provide notice of the multiple Events of Default as
Damages
179. Paragraphs 78-116 above set forth the damages to the Trusts from
document defects, robo-signing, illicit foreclosures, excessive fees for default related
services and force-placed insurance. Those damages include: (i) the inability to foreclose
or long delays in foreclosure which result in less recovery in foreclosure; (ii) additional
costs to the Trusts to cure document defects; (iii) costs associated with lawsuits by
borrowers for improper foreclosure practices and force-placed insurance; (iv) increased
costs to maintain foreclosed property; and (v) the decrease in value of the Certificates.
180. With regard to the failure to enforce the cure or repurchase remedies for
document defects and breaches of representations and warranties, the various Trusts have
suffered the loss resulting from the failure to cure or the repurchase price of the affected
Mortgage Loans. Plaintiffs have incurred losses arising from this failure through the loss
of distributions, the erosion of credit support and the concomitant diminution in the value
and make the following allegations on information and belief on the basis set forth in the
failed to provide the Certificateholders with notice of the multiple Events of Default, and
attempted to release the Loan Modification Claims in a settlement with Bank of America
for zero additional compensation and without any evaluation or analysis, because, inter
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alia, the Trustee had an egregious conflict of interest in that it was more interested in
protecting the interests of itself and of entities like Bank of America, with which the
Trustee had an ongoing business relationship, than it was with protecting the Trust
183. The Trustee holds the loans for the benefit of Plaintiffs and the other
Certificateholders in the Trusts. The Trustee has an unwaivable fiduciary duty to avoid
conflicts of interest and act in the best interests of the Trust beneficiaries, the
Certificateholders.
184. The Trustee breached these fiduciary duties by failing to provide notices
with Bank of America for zero additional compensation and without any evaluation or
analysis, and otherwise failing to act in the Plaintiffs’ best interests, as detailed above.
185. The Trustee’s actions have harmed and continue to harm Plaintiffs by
directly causing substantial and unwarranted losses to the investments in the Trusts.
These losses continue to mount as the costs of foreclosure and carrying costs on empty
186. As a result of the Trustee’s breach of fiduciary duties, Plaintiffs have been
and make the following allegations on information and belief on the basis set forth in the
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e. Ensuring that the assignments have been filled out properly and
executed;
190. Defendant’s breaches of duties rise to the level of gross negligence and
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f. The laws of several states required that Defendant hold the Note in
order to foreclose on borrowers, and foreclosures performed for
each Trust may not comply with those laws; and
suffered damages in terms of the current and future value of investments, the return on
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COUNT IV – ACCOUNTING
and make the following allegations on information and belief on the basis set forth in the
194. Significant evidence exists that Plaintiffs and each Trust are suffering
irreparable harm, including but not limited to the: (a) payment to the Master Servicer and
its affiliates and vendors of unauthorized, exorbitant, and potentially illegal fees;
(b) failure of each Trust to enforce its rights regarding the loans that comprise the Trust
corpus; and (c) actual size and nature of each Trust’s corpus itself.
195. The results of an accounting may demonstrate that Plaintiffs and others are
entitled to further relief, including but not limited to money damages, rescission on the
purchase of the Certificates, a cease and desist order, or other monetary, declaratory, or
injunctive remedies.
197. Plaintiffs demands an immediate accounting of: (a) all costs, charges, and
expenses for which the Master Servicer has obtained or sought reimbursement from
either Trust or from the proceeds of any foreclosure, payment, short sale, or other money
received related to a loan in a Trust; (b) the practices of the Master Servicer related to
foreclosures and REO Property; and (c) the actual size and nature of each Trust’s corpus.
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determined at trial;
d. To the extent that the request for accounting benefits any party, including
the Trustee, the Trusts, or the Trusts’ beneficiaries, assessing all costs and expenses of
the accounting and of this action, first, against any party found to have unjustly caused
the Trusts to incur losses or expenses, and second, if that is not possible, against the
g. Such other and further relief as the Court may deem just and proper.
By: _______/s/________________
Raymond L. Vandenberg
60 East 42nd Street, 51st Floor
New York, New York 10165
(212) 763-6800
Attorneys for Plaintiffs
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