This
                           page is dedicated to providing lenders and borrowers with critical information on some of the rulings in other cases that
                           have taken place since the Supreme Court of Georgia reached its long awaited decision in You v. JP Morgan Chase Bank,
                           N.A., 743 S.E.2d 428, 293 Ga. 67 (Ga., 2013).
                           In
                           You, the Supreme Court of Georgia was asked by a federal court to clarify Georgia law relating to non-judicial foreclosure
                           sales. The points of Georgia foreclosure law that were “unclear” and presented to the Court were as follows: 
  (1) Can the holder of a security deed be
                           considered a secured creditor, such that the deed holder can initiate foreclosure proceedings on residential property even
                           if it does not also hold the note or otherwise have any beneficial interest in the debt obligation underlying the deed?
   (2) Does OCGA § 44–14–162.2(a)
                           require that the secured creditor be identified in the notice described by that statute?
  The Supreme Court answered “yes” to the first question, and “no”
                           to the second question. What did these answers mean to both borrowers and lenders in Georgia? Well, with regard to the first
                           question, the Supreme Court’s ruling all but eliminated borrowers' attempts to stop the foreclosure by arguing the "seller"
                           at the courthouse steps did not hold the original note and deed and therefore did not have standing or authority to sell the
                           property. 
  The borrowers, prior to You,
                           were fully aware that many of the loans in Georgia had been securitized, which as the Supreme Court explained often included
                           separating ownership of the original note from the ownership of the original deed, the note often being transferred or assigned
                           several times to various entities and ultimately added to a pool of mortgages that were sold to investors as securities. 
                           The hope of the borrowers was in essence that, even if they were in default, the entity that was attempting to “sell”
                           their home at the courthouse steps did not have authority under the law to sell the property because it was not the owner
                           of both the note and the deed.  The borrowers argued only a party owning or “holding” both the original note
                           and the deed could foreclose. 
  The Supreme Court disagreed with
                           the borrowers. Georgia law permits “splitting” of the note from the deed, and doing so as part of a securitization
                           process or other transfers after the original closing will not prevent the holder of the security deed with the power of sale
                           clause from selling the property. 
  The second
                           question related to the first because the phrase “secured creditor” was contained in both questions certified
                           to the Supreme Court.  On the second question, the borrowers had hoped to argue in essence that, even after a default,
                           a foreclosure sale was difficult and maybe impossible once the loan was securitized because the “secured creditor”
                           that had to be disclosed in the local county newspaper prior to the sale on the courthouse steps could never be “identified”
                           with consistency due to the owners being a shifting pool of investors, or other factors.  The Supreme Court ended this
                           defense for borrowers and said the newspaper advertisement required prior to the sale at the courthouse merely had to identify
                           the name, address, and telephone number of the individual or entity who shall have full authority to negotiate, amend, and
                           modify all terms of the mortgage with the debtor. This could be a loan servicer or other entity to which the original holder
                           transferred the right to exercise the power of sale. 
                           What
                           has happened after You?  A settling of the storm has occurred to some extent.
  Even after You, borrowers who were in default and still trying
                           to find a way to stop the bank (“secured creditor”) from selling their home on the courthouse steps pursuant to
                           the power of sale contained in the original security deed, and ultimately evicting them,  continued to hang onto a variant
                           of the second defense wiped out by You. Specifically, borrowers argued that the “entity” identified in
                           the newspaper posting was not a proper “assignee” of the note and therefore not a proper party with standing to
                           sue. Among other arguments, borrowers claimed that the assignments of the deed to servicers of other parties were “robo-signed”
                           or not signed at all and filed with empty or forged signatures.  As a result, the borrowers argued, the loans were “assigned”
                           or transferred by fraudulent activities stripping the foreclosing party of authority or standing to sue or foreclose
                           under the power of sale in the original security deed.  However, on March 2, 2015, the Court in Lawson v. Ocwen Loan
                           Servicing, 1:14-cv-1301-WSD (ND GA 2015),  ruled that borrowers are not a party to the contracts between the lenders
                           and the borrowers themselves lack standing to challenge the assignments after the original closing:
  To the extent Plaintiff argues that the Assignments are "fraudulent,"
                           Plaintiff is not a party to the Assignments and she therefore lacks standing to challenge their validity. See Montgomery
                           v. Bank of Am., 740 S.E.2d 434, 436 (Ga. Ct. App. 2013) (because assignment of security deed was contractual, plaintiff
                           lacked standing to contest its validity because he was not a party to the assignment) (citing O.C.G.A. § 9-2-20(a), which
                           provides that an action based on a contract can be brought only by a party to the contract); Edward v. BAC Home Loans
                           Serv., L.P., 534 F. App'x 888, 891 (11th Cir. 2013) (citing Montgomery).
  Borrowers have continued to get confused about their lack of standing to challenge invalid
                           assignments. They raise concerns that the foreclosing party may not actually own any interest in the note or deed, exposing
                           the borrower to the risk of liability twice or three times, i.e., to the foreclosing party with no proper standing, and the
                           actual owner of the note and/or the deed. The competing rights of the assignees are a separate matter from whether the borrower
                           is in default, as the courts continue to explain. 
                           Borrowers
                           bringing wrongful foreclosure claims and defenses also continue to confuse the UCC provisions relating to assignments and
                           enforceability of notes as negotiable instruments from the Georgia statutes that apply to security deeds. The reasoning in
                           You  is still the law of the land in Georgia:
   Nor do we agree with the contention that Georgia's Uniform Commercial Code prohibits
                           a party who does not hold the note from exercising the power of sale in the deed securing the note. It is true that a promissory
                           note is a negotiable instrument subject to Article 3 of the UCC. See OCGA § 11–3–104 (defining “negotiable
                           instrument”). It is also true that Article 3 provides generally that only the holder of an instrument is entitled to
                           enforce the instrument. OCGA § 11–3–301. However, it is equally true that, here, Chase does not seek to enforce
                           the note but rather is enforcing its rights under the security deed, which is not a negotiable instrument and is therefore
                           not governed by Article 3. See Alexander, Georgia Real Estate Finance and Foreclosure Law, § 5:3(b) (“[a] security
                           deed is an interest in real property subject to all of the incidents and requirements of real property transfers under Georgia
                           law, and a note is a contractual obligation ... subject to the quite different requirements of the Uniform Commercial Code”).
                           In fact, Georgia law governing the transfer of security deeds expressly provides that “[t]ransfers of deeds to secure
                           debt ... shall be sufficient to transfer the property therein described and the indebtedness therein secured.” (Emphasis
                           supplied.) OCGA § 44–14–64(b). This Code section further supports the conclusion that the deed holder possesses
                           full authority to exercise the power of sale upon the debtor's default, regardless of its status with respect to the note.
  No cases since You appear to have made any substantial
                           departures from these key principles. In sum, borrowers need to carefully review the foregoing cases and others since You
                           before asserting the antiquated and overruled arguments above of “no standing, invalid assignments, unlawful splitting
                           of the note” or related defenses. The non-judicial foreclosure process is wholly separate from judicial foreclosure,
                           and of course the statutes relating to non-judicial foreclosure, O.C.G.A. § 44-14-160 et. seq. should be looked
                           at in conjunction with the developing law in Georgia relating to foreclosures. 
  Amazingly, some borrowers in default attempt to stop foreclosure and eviction by the new buyer at the sale by asserting
                           a boilerplate allegation that the foreclosing defendant cannot produce the “original” note and/or deed. 
                           Although each case must be measured on its facts, as a general rule, courts in Georgia have stated that the original is not
                           required before proceeding with non-judicial foreclosure and subsequent possessory actions. See e.g., Watkins
                           v. Beneficial, HSBC Mortg., Civ. Action No. 1:10-cv-1999-TWT-RJV, 2010 WL 4318898, *4 (N.D. Ga. Sept. 2, 2010)(Vineyard,
                           J.)("[N]othing in Georgia law requires a lender commencing foreclosure proceedings to produce the original note."),
                           adopted 2010 WL 4312878 (N.D. Ga. Oct. 21, 2010)(Thrash, J.); and Webb v. Suntrust Mortg., Inc., Civ. Action No.
                           1:10-cv-0307-TWT-CCH, 2010 WL 2950353, *2 n.5 (N.D. Ga. July 1, 2010)(Hagy, J.), adopted 2010 WL 2977950 (N.D. Ga. July 23,
                           2010)(Thrash, J.)
   
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                           ADVICE AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSTRUED AS LEGAL ADVICE ON ANY MATTER. VIEWERS SHOULD SEEK THE ADVICE OF LEGAL COUNSEL ON THEIR
                           CASES AND ISSUES.