Reserve September 14th!!


The Delaware County Bar Association cordially invites you to attend a tribute to the Hon. Carl J. Mugglin and a special session of a Five-Judge panel of the Appellate Division, Third Department, of the New York State Supreme Court at the historic Delaware County Courthouse.  A luncheon will follow.
Date:  Friday September 14, 2007Time:  10:00AM
Location:  Delaware County Courthouse, 3 Court Street, Delhi, New YorkLuncheon Location:  SUNY Delhi Hospitality Center, Delhi, New York
RSVP to 607-746-2126 by September 7th
If you are able to attend the luncheon, we are asking that payment of $20.00 be made by check payable to “the Delaware County Bar Association” so that it arrives by September 10th. Please mail the payment to:

Porter Kirkwood, Esq.
DSS Legal Unit111 Main Street, Delhi, New York 13753
Thank You!!

 

Independent Judicial Election Qualification Commission Announces Ratings for 6th Judicial District

FOLLOWUP: Law.com – Lawyers Learn From HomeBanc’s Demise


Law.com – Lawyers Learn From HomeBanc’s Demise

Closing attorneys vow to accept only wire transfers after dealing with lender’s bounced checksAndy PetersFulton County Daily Report (full text)August 23, 2007

Even though a bankruptcy judge in Delaware this week saved them from financial ruin, real estate closing attorneys said they learned a powerful lesson from the collapse of HomeBanc Corp. — never accept anything but a wire transfer at closing.

At least a dozen Atlanta-area law firms received bounced checks from HomeBanc last month, before the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Aug. 9. By HomeBanc’s count, it bounced 134 checks worth at least $18 million, but the Georgia Real Estate Closing Attorneys Association estimates the figure was $28 million.

Assuming HomeBanc’s checks were backed by sufficient funds, lawyers had disbursed the money at closings — not only to the home’s seller and the previous mortgage holder, but also to agents for their commissions and to surveyors, court clerks and others whose payments occur at closing.

When the checks bounced, lawyers had to scramble to find ways to cover their positions. Some took out home equity loans, others filed claims on their Errors & Omissions insurance policies.

On Tuesday, the bankruptcy judge handling HomeBanc transferred ownership of the loans to the closing attorneys. This move lets the lawyers recover their money by selling the loans to banks or other mortgage lenders.

The bounced checks occurred as a result of HomeBanc getting squeezed by broad turmoil in the U.S. housing market and the global credit market. As the market tanked, HomeBanc’s primary source of funds, JPMorgan Chase, on Aug. 6 cut off money for the mortgages HomeBanc sold, according to HomeBanc’s court filings.

Regardless of the problems in the market, attorneys said the rubber check problem could have been prevented simply by requiring HomeBanc to fund its loans with wire transfers.

As a result, “some law firms are requiring 100 percent wired funds from everybody — lenders, buyers, even other attorneys,” said closing attorney Jennifer L. Dickenson of Dickenson Gilroy. “There is a really high sensitivity right now to how we get the money into our accounts.”

Why HomeBanc was allowed to fund mortgages with company checks, when the large majority of other mortgage lenders paid only by wire transfer, speaks to the clout HomeBanc carried in metro Atlanta — if not its level of intimidation.

“They were big enough they could frankly bully everybody,” said Jeffrey P. Ganek, managing partner of Ganek, Wright & Dobkin’s Midtown office. “You had to follow their rules.”

HomeBanc, or any mortgage lender, benefits by funding loans with checks as opposed to wire transfers, Ganek said. While wire transfers represent an immediate shift in money, checks take days to clear a bank, allowing HomeBanc to earn more interest on the money as it sat in escrow, Ganek said.

“Even if it’s only a day or two extra it’s sitting in an interest-bearing account, if you’re doing enough loans, it’s a lot of money,” he said.

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Read Entire Article

Magistrate retires

Cooperstown Bureau – The Daily Star

After more than 21 years at the job, Nelson Stiles, support magistrate for Otsego and Delaware counties, retired earlier this month.

 “I had just turned 64, had more than 21 years in and thought it was time to look at life from a different perspective,’’ he said.

 A support magistrate works through counties’ family courts, deciding issues of paternity and child support.Stiles, a former assistant Chenango County attorney who lives in Norwich, said a support magistrate’s decisions are binding, although they may be appealed to a family court judge.The job is stressful.

“You’re dealing with people in conflict,’’ he noted, “and it’s hard to please everybody.’’ Support issues revolve around money, he said, and one party may think an amount is excessive while the other believes it is not enough

.

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 Read entire article in the Daily Star

 

Law.com – Closing Attorneys See Red Over HomeBanc Mortgage’s Bad Checks


Law.com – Closing Attorneys See Red Over HomeBanc Mortgage’s Bad Checks

Real estate attorneys caught between covering bounced checks or risking bar violations after company files for bankruptcy

Andy PetersFulton County Daily ReportAugust 16, 2007

John K. Haley, a real estate closing attorney in Buford, Ga., left work July 31 thinking the HomeBanc mortgages he’d closed earlier that day had cleared.

That turned out not to be true. Haley was one of dozens of Atlanta-area real estate closing attorneys who received bounced checks last month from HomeBanc Mortgage Corp. Lawyers estimate HomeBanc may have issued $20 million or more in bounced checks July 30 and July 31. HomeBanc filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Aug. 9.

Because HomeBanc’s primary lender, JPMorgan Chase, stopped financing the company around the end of July, HomeBanc could no longer provide funds on the mortgages it had sold. That caused a big problem for some lawyers: HomeBanc had already issued checks to these lawyers, who then disbursed the money to sellers, real estate agents, surveyors and others.

That left numerous lawyers high and dry.

“These lawyers are really scrambling right now,” said C. Scott Logan, president of the Georgia Real Estate Closing Attorneys Association.

While the state’s “good funds” law requires lawyers to wait until checks have cleared the bank before closing a mortgage, in practice most real estate closing attorneys close mortgages when they have the check in hand, without waiting for the money to clear, Logan said.

In addition to being stuck with thousands, if not millions of dollars in bounced checks, these lawyers also worry they may have violated State Bar of Georgia rules. That’s because they could have disbursed money from an escrow account when the money really wasn’t there, creating a negative balance. It’s a violation of Bar rules for a lawyer to have a negative balance in an escrow account.

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Read Entire Article

Appellate Division to Sit in Delhi in Honor of J. Mugglin–9/14/07

DELAWARE COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION

September 15, 2007,

Dear Members:

The Appellate Division, Third Judicial Department will sit in Delhi, at the Delaware County Courthouse on Friday, September 14, 2007.

As many of you know, the Honorable Carl J. Mugglin will retire from the Bench at the end of this year. As a tribute to Justice Mugglin, all or most of Justices of the Third Department will be present in Delhi on September 14th. At 10 AM on September 14th, before hearing oral arguments, there will be a tribute (estimate c. 20 min.) to Justice Mugglin, by speakers including our own Paul Eaton in addition to one or more of the Justices.

I am writing to let you know that you are all welcome – and – that you may leave after the tribute, before the first argument begins.

There also will be a buffet lunch following, to be held at SUNY Delhi – which we, the Bar Association, are sponsoring. More info on the lunch will be coming shortly.

Please reserve time in your schedules, if possible, to help honor Justice Mugglin.

Sincerely,

Nancy K. Deming

President

CHAPTER 458 LAWS OF NEW YORK 2007

CHAPTER TEXT:

LAWS OF NEW YORK, 2007

CHAPTER 458

AN ACT to amend the real property actions and proceedings law and the
civil practice law and rules, in relation to providing additional
notice to mortgagors that a foreclosure action has been commenced

Became a law August 1, 2007, with the approval of the Governor.
Passed by a majority vote, three-fifths being present.

The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
bly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. The real property actions and proceedings law is amended by
adding a new section 1320 to read as follows:
§ 1320. Special summons requirement in private residence cases. In an
action to foreclose a mortgage on a residential property containing not
more than three units, in addition to the usual requirements applicable
to a summons in the court, the summons shall contain a notice in bold-
face in the following form:
NOTICE
YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME
If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy
of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this
foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court,
a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home.
Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for
further information on how to answer the summons and protect your prop-
erty.
Sending a payment to your mortgage company will not stop this foreclo-
sure action.
YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR
THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT.
§ 2. Subparagraph (iii) of paragraph 3 of subdivision (g) of section
3215 of the civil practice law and rules, as added by chapter 77 of the
laws of 1986, is amended to read as follows:
(iii) This requirement shall not apply to cases in the small claims
part of any court, or to any summary proceeding to recover possession of
real property, or to actions affecting title to real property, except
residential mortgage foreclosure actions.
§ 3. This act shall take effect immediately.

Delaware County Surrogate’s Court Time Change!!

Pursuant to the Judge’s request, Surrogate’s Court will now be held at 9:00 a.m. instead of 10:00 a.m.  I realize that it’s been at 10:00 a.m. since the beginning, but the Court gets super busy and we felt we needed to shift some things around to work better.


Lisa M. Loucks

Surrogate’s Court Clerk

Firefox 2


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Law.com – Lack of Retainer Leads Court to Order Firm to Return Fees Beyond Contingency


Anthony Lin–NY Law Journal–8/08/07

 

“A client retaining an attorney on a contingent basis, in the absence of clear and express language to the contrary, contemplates that the percentage fixed is to constitute payment for whatever services may be necessary to obtain collection of any judgment which may be recovered, whether the services be in connection with an appeal taken from the judgment or in connection with efforts to collect the judgment, or both,” the judge wrote in Siagha v. Katz & Associates, 603927/05.

She noted that there had only been one retainer agreement filed with the Office of Court Administration in the case, a standard form filed by Schwartz Gutstein. The judge also noted that none of the lawyers who actually represented Siagha had ever taken the step of obtaining a retainer agreement specific to the case. They also never wrote him a letter or e-mail describing or discussing their legal fees.

 

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