To recover on a promissory note, the plaintiff (the Lender in the case of foreclosure and debt collection) must prove:(1) the existence of the note in question; (2) that the party sued signed the note; (3) that the plaintiff is the owner or holder of the note in due course; and (4) that a certain balance is due and owing on the note.
Trial court erred when it did not proceed to take testimony before it entered default judgment (see definition below) for the plaintiff; the unsworn statement of plaintiff's (plaintiff is the lender) attorney could not support default judgment rendered.
It is also true, in mortgage foreclosures, prove up of the claim requires presentment of the "original" promissory note and general account and ledger statement. Claim of damages, to be admissible as evidence, must incorporate records such as a general ledger and accounting of an alleged unpaid promissory note, the person responsible for preparing and maintaining the account general ledger must provide a complete accounting which must be sworn to and dated by the person who maintained the ledger.
To recover on a promissory note, the plaintiff must prove: (1) the existence
of the note in question; (2) that the party sued signed the note; (3) that the
plaintiff is the owner or holder of the note in due course; and (4) that a
certain balance is due and owing on the note.
1) the existence of the note in question
2) If the "ORIGINAL" note you signed in ink that contains your signature is
claimed to be lost, stolen, missing and/or destroyed, then your defense is as
follows:
3) the "named" Plaintiff is not the 'holder in due course" of the note and only
an agent or nominee for the true beneficial owners and holders in due course;
4) there may be fraud upon the court in that the named Plaintiff may not have
ANY interest to the note and that the supposedly lost note is not lost, but may
have been intentionally destroyed due to missing assignments on the note which
may have made it void and a legal nullity, thus they have exploited key and
vital evidence;
5) there is no proof that the named Plaintiff ever held the note or took
possession of the note and thus has no claim or right to bringing about the
foreclosure;
6) there is no proof, without the note, that a proper chain of assignments took
place and that the lien positions were properly perfected;
7) other unnamed and disclosed real parties in interest may have a claim to the
note and be the rightful beneficial owners to the note and must be identified
and brought before the court;
8) there may be several unnamed and disclosed real parties in interest may have
a claim to the note and be the rightful beneficial owners of the note;
9) that the party sued signed the note
10) If the "ORIGINAL" note you signed in ink that contains your signature is
claimed to be lost, stolen, missing and/or destroyed, then you need to notify me
and also put on affirmative defenses that:
11) the note in question is not the note you signed and executed in ink and only
the one you signed in ink that presumably contains your fingerprints can be
relied upon by your handwriting analysis expert;
12) in an electronic age, it is a simple matter to place someone's signature or
image upon a document and that it is very difficult to imagine such a valuable
negotiable instrument being lost or missing without a nefarious motive.
13) that the plaintiff is the owner or holder of the note in due course;
14) If the "ORIGINAL" note you signed in ink that contains your signature is
claimed to be lost, stolen, missing and/or destroyed, then you need put on
affirmative defenses that: a) the mortgage industry, investors, and GSE's such
as Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and FHLBs etc. have a requirement that the last
endorsement to them be undated and "blank" leaving the payee line blank and
making the negotiable instrument a sort of "bearer bond" and instrument. as
such, any party finding or stealing the note can place their name on the payee
line, claim ownership of the note, and sell the note to others who may make a
demand upon you in the future. as such, you require money to be deposited in an
escrow account or with the court in an amount equal to the amount claimed owed
on the note, until such missing note is found or upon your death. notes have a
life of their own...
b) if the note was destroyed or lost intentionally (the industry maintains this
practice) then they may be trying to hide the beneficial owners and shield them
from any assignee liability arising from the actions of the servicer who they
hire, supervise and most importantly authorize to foreclose upon you. without
the note, since subsequent endorsements are not recorded to avoid payment of
taxes and t hide true and real beneficial interests, there is no possible way to
determine who ever held a rightful interest in the note and who you may have
claims or counter claims against and who should be presently before the court as
a real party in interest.
c) Furthermore, if there are missing assignments of the original note and the
assignment went from Lender A to Lender B to Lender D without an intervening
assignment from Lender B to Lender C and From Lender C to Lender D, then the
note may be void and a legal nullity in your state.
d) It is industry practice to not name the GSE, investor, or real party in
interest in foreclosure and to use as a front for the Plaintiff:
i) The very original lender who may or may not even be in business any more or
sold their interest in the note long ago, only to have a claim made upon them
for repurchase;
ii) A Servicer of even "special servicer" who is acting as an agent for the
investors, GSE's or real party in interest, but has no beneficial ownership in
the note since they are only being paid to collect and foreclosure by the real
parties in interest
iii) A "nominee" such as MERS who has no legal authority to foreclose upon you
and do business in your state and who according to their own written documents
and verbal assurances never hold the note or own "any" beneficial interest in
the note!!!!!
e) Notes are pledged, sold, bifurcated, and traded in various derivative
transactions like bubblegum baseball cards and their transfers, sales, pledges
etc. Are not publicly recorded. As such, only possession of the actual original
note can prove the actual owner and holder in due course of the note and who you
can make an offer of payment to for purchase of the note by yourself, another
family member or partner. You have a right to know the rightful owner of the
note so an offer for payment of the note at a discount and at fair market value
can be made. If the note has been pledged and encumbered, then that party must
be made aware of the foreclosure and your right to negotiate with them a payment
and release of the note by you, other lien holders or private parties;
f) Notes are traded often and you need to inspect the physical note to see who
the real prior parties were that held and endorsed your note since you may have
counter and cross claims against them and need to bring them before the court
for the action, since they may have improperly inflated your principal balance,
amount owed or escrow account by not applying your payments correctly; adding
fees not legally owed by you to the principal balance; miscalculating the
interest and not properly amortizing your loan; fraudulent selling your loan or
misreporting you on your credit report.
g) Federal Circuit Courts have ruled that the only way to prove the perfection
of any security [including promissory note] is by actual possession of the
security. Current or prior possession must be proved up.
(h) that a certain balance is due and owing on the note.
15) You must have the master transaction histories and general ledgers for the
account since a "dump," "summary," or redacted record cannot be relied upon to
determine the rightful amounts owed by having a complete audit of your account.
In order to conduct a proper audit, master records and all prior records must be
compiled, reviewed, analyzed, and reconciled. In is not you responsibility to
prove each payment was made. It is your responsibility to say a payment was made
and provide evidence, including your word that it was made. It is the note
holder's duty and responsibility to validate the claims being made on the note
and the amount owed. If they have the master records or claim that the records
of prior servicers are missing, then there is no rightful way for anyone to
prove up the balances and amounts they claim are owed!!!! Furthermore, you must
claim:
a) That the principal balance claimed owed, is not owed, and is the wrong
amount.
b) That the loan has not been properly credited and amortized;
c) That the current servicer cannot be relied upon to testify and certify that
prior amounts, transactions, credits, debits, charges and fees added by prior
servicers were indeed proper and correct and that the account they were
transferred was properly amortized and credited. As such, the person holding the
ledgers at the prior servicer must come and testify as to the amounts owed on
the note.
d) dumps and summaries of amounts owed cannot be relied upon and only original
ledgers and master records and the keeper of those records cant testify as to
the amounts claimed owed and due.
Supporting Case Law
Where the complaining party cannot prove the existence of the note, then there is no note.
See Pacific Concrete F.C.U. V. Kauanoe, 62 Haw. 334, 614 P.2d 936 (1980), GE Capital Hawaii, Inc. v. Yonenaka 25 P.3d 807, 96 Hawaii 32, (Hawaii App 2001).
Siwooganock Bank in Lancaster NH, in alleged foreclosure suit, failed or refused to produce the actual note which Siwooganock alleges Eva J. Lovejoy owed.
To recover on a promissory note, the plaintiff must prove: (1) the existence of the note in question; (2) that the party sued signed the note; (3) that the plaintiff is the owner or holder of the note; and (4) that a certain balance is due and owing on the note. See In Re: SMS Financial LLC. v. Abco Homes, Inc. No.98-50117 February 18, 1999 (5th Circuit Court of Appeals.)
Volume 29 of the New Jersey Practice Series, Chapter 10 Section 123, page 566, emphatically states, “...; and no part payments should be made on the bond or note unless the person to whom payment is made is able to produce the bond or note and the part payments are endorsed thereon. It would seem that the mortgagor would normally have a Common law right to demand production or surrender of the bond or note and mortgage, as the case may be. See Restatement, Contracts S 170(3), (4) (1932); C.J.S. Mortgages S 469, in Carnegie Bank v, Shalleck 256 N.J. Super 23 (App. Div 1992), the Appellate Division held, “When the underlying mortgage is evidenced by an instrument meeting the criteria for negotiability set forth in N.J.S. 12A:3-104, the holder of the instrument shall be afforded all the rights and protections provided a holder in due course pursuant to N.J.S. 12A:3-302"
Since no one is able to produce the “instrument” there is no competent evidence before the Court that any party is the holder of the alleged note or the true holder in due course. New Jersey common law dictates that the plaintiff prove the existence of the alleged note in question, prove that the party sued signed the alleged note, prove that the plaintiff is the owner and holder of the alleged note, and prove that certain balance is due and owing on any alleged note. Federal Circuit Courts have ruled that the only way to prove the perfection of any security is by actual possession of the security.
Supporting Case Law
Unequivocally the Court’s rule is that in order to prove the “instrument”, possession is mandatory.
See Matter of Staff Mortg. & Inv. Corp., 550 F.2d 1228 (9th Cir 1977). “Under the Uniform Commercial Code, the only notice sufficient to inform all interested parties that a security interest in instruments has been perfected is actual possession by the secured party, his agent or bailee.” Bankruptcy Courts have followed the Uniform Commercial Code. In Re Investors & Lenders, Ltd. 165 B.R. 389 (Bankruptcy.D.N.J.1994), “Under the New Jersey Uniform Commercial Code (NJUCC), promissory note is “instrument,” security interest in which must be perfected by possession.
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