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U.S. Bank Admits Their Limited Authority
- Posted on
- by Donna Steenkamp
Unveiling the Truth Behind Trustee Roles in Foreclosure
US Banks own Brochure is a bombshell revelation
In the battle to defend your home from wrongful foreclosure, homeowners often find themselves up against big names like U.S. Bank, Deutsche Bank, or Bank of New York Mellon. These “trustees” appear on foreclosure documents, often leading homeowners to believe these institutions are actively managing their loans and directly pulling the strings in the foreclosure process. But here’s the truth: *They’re not*.
Recently, I came across an internal brochure from U.S. Bank that makes their role as trustee crystal clear. It’s like hearing from the horse’s mouth that the supposed power these trustees hold over your mortgage is largely a facade. This document exposes a shocking reality that many homeowners – and even their attorneys – don’t fully understand. Let’s break it down.
In U.S. Bank’s own words, as a trustee for Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS), they perform a narrow set of duties:
– They hold an interest in mortgage loans for the benefit of investors.
– They collect payments from the servicer and distribute them to the investors.
– They do not initiate foreclosures.
– They do not manage or maintain properties in foreclosure.
– They do not approve loan modifications.
– They do not oversee or direct the actions of mortgage servicers.
The brochure even says that trustees like U.S. Bank have no advance knowledge of when a mortgage loan defaults. They are merely a placeholder, an administrative figurehead for the trust that pools together thousands of mortgages and sells them off as securities to investors.
So, what does this mean for homeowners fighting foreclosure? U.S. Bank (and Trustees Like Them) Often Lack Standing to Foreclose
In foreclosure cases, the trustee is often named as the plaintiff on behalf of the trust. Homeowners are led to believe that these banks are acting on behalf of the trust as the rightful party to enforce the mortgage. But U.S. Bank’s own admission reveals that they don’t have the authority to initiate foreclosure actions. They’re just a conduit for payments between the servicer and investors – nothing more.
This lack of authority can translate into a lack of standing in foreclosure proceedings. If the trustee doesn’t actually control the loan or make decisions about foreclosure, it raises serious questions about who has the legal right to enforce the mortgage. Is it the servicer? The investors? Or is it someone else entirely? The chain of ownership and authority over the loan can become extremely murky.
Here’s the bombshell: The servicers are the ones pulling the strings in foreclosure. They are the ones initiating the foreclosure process, deciding whether to modify your loan, and handling all aspects of loan management. The trustee has no say in these decisions. They are just the figurehead on the foreclosure complaint.
If you’ve ever tried to negotiate a loan modification, you were probably dealing with the servicer. If your payments were mysteriously misapplied or your mortgage was suddenly in default despite paying on time, again, it was the servicer at work. And if you’re facing foreclosure, chances are it’s the servicer, not the trustee, driving the process.
Why This Matters in Your Foreclosure Defense
Understanding the trustee’s limited role is a critical weapon in defending your home. Trustees like U.S. Bank can be challenged on their standing to foreclose. If the trustee doesn’t have the legal authority to act, the foreclosure can’t proceed – at least not without a thorough examination of who actually holds the note and mortgage.
This is where “the chain of title” becomes crucial. The servicer might claim they have the right to foreclose on behalf of the trust, but do they? Did they properly transfer ownership of your mortgage? Did the trust acquire it according to its own rules? Was your loan even validly assigned to the trust in the first place? These questions are often unanswered – or ignored – in foreclosure cases.
The reality is that many foreclosure actions are based on sloppy paperwork, questionable transfers, and outright fraud. By challenging the trustee’s standing and digging into the servicer’s actions, homeowners can expose flaws in the foreclosure process and potentially stop it altogether. Many of the best defense narratives drafted by our legal team here at Living Lies focus on lack of standing and Fraud by those pretending to have rights they actually don’t.
The Power of Information
U.S. Bank’s own brochure is a gift to homeowners facing foreclosure. It strips away the illusion that these big trustees have the power to foreclose on your home. They don’t. The servicers, who often hide in the shadows, are the real players behind the scenes.
As you fight to defend your home, remember this: the entities named in foreclosure filings often don’t have the authority they claim. Trustees are not the ones making decisions, and their role is largely passive. If U.S. Bank itself admits this, it opens up a pathway to challenge their standing, question the validity of the foreclosure, and protect your rights.
Need help in assessing your case? Does your attorney need our help? Use our services to help guide you through the process early enough to avoid mistakes that can cost you your home in an illegal foreclosure action.
Call our office today at 844.478.6774 to inquire if we can help. You can also submit a case statement here and get a complimentary recommendation as to your best course of action.
FORECLOSURE DEFENSE IS NOT SIMPLE. THERE IS NO GUARANTEE OF A FAVORABLE RESULT. THE COMMENTS ON THIS BLOG AND ELSEWHERE ARE BASED ON THE ABILITY OF A HOMEOWNER TO WIN THE CASE NOT MERELY SETTLE IT. OTHER LAWYERS HAVE STRATEGIES DIRECTED AT SETTLEMENT OR MODIFICATION. THE FORECLOSURE MILLS WILL DO EVERYTHING POSSIBLE TO WEAR YOU DOWN AND UNDERMINE YOUR CONFIDENCE. ALL EVIDENCE SHOWS THAT NO MEANINGFUL SETTLEMENT OCCURS UNTIL THE 11TH HOUR OF LITIGATION.
But challenging the “servicers” and other claimants before they seek enforcement can delay action by them for as much as 14 years or more. In addition, although currently rare, it can also result in your homestead being free and clear of any mortgage lien that you contested. (No Guarantee).
Yes you DO need a lawyer.
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