Steven Cohen  |  January 31, 2020

Category: Banking News

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picture of Wells Fargo sign with bank in backgroundA federal judge in California has certified a national Class of Wells Fargo mortgage customers who claim the bank denied them mortgage modifications, despite meeting the requirements for the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP.)

Numerous plaintiffs filed this class action lawsuit in December 2018, claiming they lost their homes to foreclosure after they were unfairly denied the loan modifications.

They allege that a calculation error by Wells Fargo caused certain fees to be misstated, which resulted in incorrect loan denials.

The judge rejected a proposed subclass of homeowners but decided that the court will look into the value of the equity lost by each homeowner on a nationwide Class basis.

“Losing your home through a foreclosure is one of the most disruptive events that you could experience,” the plaintiffs state in their Wells Fargo class action lawsuit.

The plaintiffs argue that Congress set aside $50 billion in funding for HAMP, which was created to make sure people were able to keep their homes and provide stability to homeowners during dark economic times.

The Wells Fargo class action lawsuit claims that the defendant accepted $6.4 billion in HAMP funding and developed its own tool to calculate the eligibility of the borrowers.

The bank admitted that their tool miscalculated the claims which led to more than 870 borrowers to be denied HAMP money, even though they qualified for the modification program, according to the plaintiffs

The bank also admits that it foreclosed on 545 borrowers who should have been granted HAMP funding.

Plaintiff Alicia Hernandez claims her house was foreclosed, although she should have qualified for a loan modification program under HAMP. She alleges the bank sent her a check for $15,000, which informed her of the bank miscalculation error denying her the loan modification.

The plaintiff claims that the check was accompanied by a letter explaining how Wells Fargo determined the amount of the check and assured her that the amount should “make things right.”

The judge in his order states that other plaintiffs, notably Debora Granja and Sandra Campos, are typical of the proposed Class. The court notes that Granja signed a Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac contract and Campos signed a Federal Housing Administration (FHA) mortgage contract.

The judge notes they were harmed when Wells Fargo did not tell them that they could fix a default on their homes with a HAMP loan modification, and then foreclosed on their homes. 

The judge certified the following nationwide Class: “All persons in the United States who between 2010 and 2018 (i) qualified for a home loan modification or repayment plan pursuant to the requirements of government-sponsored enterprises (such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac), the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), the U.S. Department of Treasury’s Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP); (ii) were not offered a home loan modification or repayment plan by Wells Fargo due to excessive attorney’s fees being included in the loan modification decision process; and (iii) whose home Wells Fargo sold in foreclosure.”

The complaint alleges breach of contract, intentional infliction of emotional distress, violation of California’s Homeowners Bill of Rights, and violation of California’s unfair competition law.

Do you have a mortgage through Wells Fargo? Leave a message in the comments section below.

The plaintiffs are represented by Michael L. Schrag, Joshua J. Bloomfield and Linda P. Lam of Gibbs Law Group LLP and Richard M. Paul III, Ashlea G. Schwarz and Laura C. Fellows of Paul LLP.

The Wells Fargo Mortgage Class Action Lawsuit is Hernandez, et al. v. Wells Fargo Bank NA, et al., Case No. 3:18-cv-07354, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

UPDATE: On March 19, 2020, a judge rejected Wells Fargo’s effort to stay a class action lawsuit, saying the bank did not notify some borrowers about mortgage modification options.

UPDATE 2: May 2020, the Wells Fargo mortgage class action settlement is now open. Click here to file a claim.

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88 thoughts onWells Fargo Wrongful Foreclosure Class Action Lawsuit Gets Certified

  1. Juan Rodriguez says:

    I was denied within minutes of speaking with the wells Fargo loan agent in the bank. I had to let my payments fall behind in order to consider my eligibility.

    1. Michelle Durden says:

      Same here. We were advised by Wells Fargo to not pay in order to qualify. My husband and I did everything that was asked of us… scanning and faxing and mailing, only to be told they didn’t receive the paperwork.. only to do the same thing over again!
      We lost our home and we separated because of it. How is that compensated?
      I would love to be a part of this settlement. Wells Fargo needs to pay for what they have done to so many families!

  2. Ronald D Grimes says:

    We were denied may times for wells Fargo modification. cause they were greedy they served po papers and all. That coprtation. was. Falsifying. Papers. And couldn’t produce the original paper work. Sure them bastard. We almost lost our house. to there bastards

  3. Patricia Dowling-Cook says:

    We have a Wells Fargo Home Loan and have been denied many times for a modification but yet they keep sending us notices saying we qualify for a new rate. They never came through with help even though we sent in all the information needed that they asked for.

  4. david herman says:

    I tried for over 6 years to save my home and get approved. Denied. But they approved a Short Sale for less then half the value of the home and back mortgage. Everyone made out but my family. I have nothing hardly left. No Credit no home. What a mess. It’s been three years almost since that short sale/foreclosure and my life is still a mess and my financial life is gone.

  5. Joyce C says:

    They took my house

  6. Pat Iurato says:

    I had a Wells Fargo loan on my house that got foreclised on in 2010. I was never offered the Harp program. after I was unable to pay the mortgage for about 3 months They sold my loan to the secondary lender(Clark county credit union) and that caused my home to be foreclosed.

  7. Cynthia A Mickle says:

    I have a WF loan…It took an outside agency ( People Inc) to push my modification thru. I did succedd, eventually, but there were wome truly scary moments.

  8. Doug says:

    We would like information on this, please. We had a Wells Fargo mortgage and tried to refinance and were foreclosed on in 2012.

  9. Darla Birks says:

    we are in a battle trying to keep our home against wells fargo been denied everything and still fighting against them. i have all paperwork on this. they will not work with us and we started this in august of 2018.

  10. Angela says:

    This happened to us as well. They told us we didn’t qualify for a HAMP modification, even though we had a HUD loan, and the HUD office told us we did. WellsFargo did their own “Loan Modification” which they always made it to where the repayments were higher than the previous loan payments. We ended up giving our home back to the bank, because we couldn’t make the “Loan Modification” payments.

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