Seattle Debt Law: Blog

Areas of Practice

Louisiana Decision Takes On Lending Fees

Categories: Bankruptcy, Current Events

Among the many unsavory, unethical, and downright illegal practices employed by mortgage services in recent years is the way they drench borrowers with excessive and punitive fees for just about anything they can think of, often without even notifying the borrower. Fortunately, judges are beginning to take notice. An important decision last month (PDF) from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana found Wells Fargo negligent in the case of Dorothy Chase Stewart, a New Orleans-area widow whose mortgage the bank serviced. The court found that Wells Fargo levied numerous fees and charges against Mrs. Stewart’s account without ever notifying her, for such things as late payments and “inspections” that never took place. In one particularly egregious instance, Wells Fargo charged Mrs. Stewart $250 for two inspections that supposedly took place on September 12, 2005—a day when her parish was under an evacuation order due to Hurricane Katrina! Judge Elizabeth W. Magner assessed more than $27,000 in damages against Wells Fargo, and ordered additional sanctions to force the bank to clean up its act.

If you have encountered any bogus fees on your statement, take a few minutes to read the attached decision—it’s kind of long, but well worth it.

Link • Comment or trackback •  Submit to Reddit Add Post to del.icio.us Seed this story on Newsvine

No Comments »

No comments yet.

Leave a comment

Copyright © 2010 Seattle Debt Law LLC •  Powered by WordPress