Monday, February 17, 2014

Mortgage Lenders and Servicers Out of Control?

Mortgage Contracts Allow Creditors to Monitor Credit
Today I reviewed a husband and wife’s credit reports and was shocked to see what their mortgage servicer was doing to them. Over five years ago disaster struck this middle-aged couple, an illness and loss of employment forced them to file bankruptcy. They couldn’t afford their house payments so they surrendered their home in the bankruptcy, moved out, the debt was discharged, so they waited patiently for the lender to foreclose. The property was soon posted for foreclosure but for some unknown reason the foreclosure didn’t go through and hasn’t to this day.
     
Once the debt was discharged the lender no longer had a right to monitor or review the consumer's credit reports since there was no longer a debtor-creditor relationship. About a year later the mortgage servicer contacted the couple several times trying to get them to apply for a modification, do a short sale or give them a deed in lieu of foreclosure. The couple cooperated at first but when a short sale was offered to them it was rejected. The lender knew the couple was not qualified for a modification since they had vacated the property and the debt had been discharged. After the rejection the couple notified the lender in writing that they were fed up and would no longer participate in a short sale or deed in lieu of foreclosure and told them not to contact them in any manner in the future. The letter worked for a couple years and then suddenly the letters, statements, and phone calls began again.
  
When the couple came to us to see what could be done to stop the harassment we pulled their credit reports and were aghast to find out that in 2012 and 2013 the mortgage servicer had pulled their credit reports over 39 times without their consent and without a permissible purpose! It’s hard to believe that some of our leading financial institutions would be a party to such blatant invasions of privacy, but we see it far too often, not only with this servicer but with many others as well. Since the debt had been discharged and was uncollectible, the only conclusions we can draw are that the mortgage servicer doesn’t have the ability to control its automatic collection programs, it has no respect for their customer’s right to privacy, or both. Fortunately, there is a remedy for this flagrant violation of the law, the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA).
 
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