(Well, proof, anyway!
An interesting wrinkle had been added to the foreclosure process.
When someone goes to a court they must prove that THEY are the ones to whom the debt is owed.
With the manner in which a lender has taken a loan from a buyer and then sells the loan to another party - the normal process - and then that party sells all or a part of the loan to others and THEY, in turn, sell to . . . well, you get the picture.
What this all means is that the original loan may have been broken into a dozen parts before this is all over and NO ONE can come up with the paperwork to prove that they are the ones owed the money.
If they can't prove THEY are owed the money, they have no standing to foreclose. - jb
An interesting wrinkle had been added to the foreclosure process.
When someone goes to a court they must prove that THEY are the ones to whom the debt is owed.
With the manner in which a lender has taken a loan from a buyer and then sells the loan to another party - the normal process - and then that party sells all or a part of the loan to others and THEY, in turn, sell to . . . well, you get the picture.
What this all means is that the original loan may have been broken into a dozen parts before this is all over and NO ONE can come up with the paperwork to prove that they are the ones owed the money.
If they can't prove THEY are owed the money, they have no standing to foreclose. - jb
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