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When you take out a loan to buy a home, you're usually required to sign two documents: a mortgage (or deed of trust) and a promissory note. "Assignments" and "endorsements" are how these documents get transferred between banks. If you're facing a foreclosure and the foreclosing bank doesn't have the proper endorsements and assignments, you might have a defense to the foreclosure.
To fully understand the difference between an assignment of mortgage (or deed of trust) and endorsement of the note, you must understand the basic terms and documents involved in a residential mortgage transaction.
These documents are separate, and each has its own distinct set of rules that govern how they're exchanged between banks.
An assignment transfers all the original mortgagee's interest under the mortgage or deed of trust to the new bank. Generally, the mortgage or deed of trust is recorded shortly after the mortgagors sign it, and, if the mortgage is subsequently transferred, each assignment is recorded in the county land records.
The Role of MERS in the Assignment Process
Mortgage Electronic Registration System, Inc. (MERS), a company that the banking industry created, tracks the ownership of mortgage loans. MERS eliminated the need for separate assignments each time a loan is transferred because it tracks the transfers in its system.
Courts have dismissed some foreclosure cases when the foreclosing party didn't have an assignment. But some states don't allow borrowers to challenge the legality of assignments, saying they don't have standing.
And certain states follow the general rule that "a mortgage follows the note." So, a missing assignment of mortgage won't necessarily stop a foreclosure. If the foreclosing party is clearly entitled to enforce the promissory note, the court may allow a foreclosure to go ahead even if a valid assignment doesn't exist. Whether a written, recorded assignment is needed depends on state law.
When a loan changes hands, the promissory note is endorsed (signed over) to the new owner of the loan. In some cases, the note is endorsed in blank, which makes it a bearer instrument under Article 3 of the Uniform Commercial Code. So, any party that possesses the note has the legal authority to enforce it.
A n entity that owns the loan has standing to initiate a foreclosure .
Assignments and endorsements prove which party owns the debt and, therefore, may bring the foreclosure action. If the documentation isn't correct or complete in your case, you might have a defense against a foreclosure.
If you're facing a foreclosure and think the foreclosing party in your case doesn't have the right documentation, consider talking to an attorney who can give you information about the laws in your state, let you know whether an argument based on the right to foreclose, called "standing," is likely to be successful in your case, and give you advice about what to do in your particular circumstances.