The Mortgage Elimination
by Bill Bronchick
You've seen the emails:
"Legally eliminate your mortgage!"
Can this possibly be true? Well, I've read the claims and researched the law and
here's what I came up with.
The Claim
The claim is that you can legally eliminate your mortgage based on an accounting
loophole that goes something like this...
"If the lender who funded your loan used borrowed money to fund your loan, then
the loan is not valid. And, since the loan is not valid, the security (mortgage
or deed of trust) is not valid either. All you do is simply march into court and
ask a judge to void your mortgage lien, and you don't have to pay it back."
Now, without going into the legal issues, a common sense approach would tell you
that the entire premise of this argument is patently absurd. Think about it...
most lenders use borrowed money to fund loans, that's the nature of the
business.
So, if these "mortgage elimination" promoters are correct, then millions of
mortgages would be void. The entire economy would collapse. This sounds vaguely
familiar to the "tax protestor" scam where people claimed that they didn't owe
income tax because the government did not have the constitutional authority to
tax them. More on that later...
The Law
The mortgage elimination promoters cite various court cases in support of their
position. At first blush, it would seem there are dozens of court cases in which
the judge actually did what they claimed, that is, declare a mortgage void
because the lender used borrowed funds for the loan. But, since most laymen are
not trained in the law, they take this stuff, hook, line and sinker.
I've read the decisions and they all have a common theme: they don't support the
mortgage elimination theory. In fact, most of the cases are only vaguely on
point.
The "tax protestor" promoters did the same thing... take a quote from a judge's
decision out of context and cite the case as support for their position. In the
end, the tax protestors all lost in court, paid large fines and went away with
their tails between their legs. The government went after the promoters of the
scam.
Similarly, the government is going after the promoters of the mortgage
elimination scam. The Federal Reserve recently issued a warning, a copy of which
can be found at the end of this article. The Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency issued a similar warning last year.
The Minnesota Attorney General has also gone after a company that has allegedly
charged consumers as much as $7,500 for this scheme.
The Cult of Stupidity
As I write this, undoubtedly a few "followers" of the theory will email me and
argue that I don't understand or that I'm part of the "establishment mentality"
that keeps the little guy down. Of course, these are likely the same people who
are collecting referral fees from the scammers that are charging thousands of
dollars to consumers in exchange for a false promise to eliminate their
mortgages.
On a philosophical level, I appreciate discussions about how the dollar really
isn't backed by gold, the government doesn't have the right to tax Americans and
the the like. But I wouldn't tell a client to actually rely on any of these
theories in a court of law. Nor would I charge someone thousands of dollars in
exchange for a promise or guarantee that their mortgage could be eliminated
without paying it off.
How to Really Eliminate Your Mortgage
There are some legal ways to eliminate your mortgage:
1. Pay it off in full.
2. File for chapter 7 bankruptcy (in which case you will not be liable for the
mortgage note, but you will also lose the house).
3. Find a REAL legal challenge that a judge is willing to accept as a valid
reason to declare the debt void, such as usury, gross violation of lending laws,
fraud, incompetency or the like.
Bio:
William Bronchick, CEO of Legalwiz Publications, is a Nationally-known attorney,
author, entrepreneur and speaker. Mr. Bronchick has been practicing law and real
estate since 1990, having been involved in over 600 transactions. He has
appeared as a guest on numerous radio and television talk shows including CNBC
Power Lunch. He has been featured in Who's Who in American Business, Money
Magazine, the Los Angeles Times and the Denver Business Journal. William
Bronchick has served as President of the Colorado Association of Real Estate
Investors since 1996.