Jessica M. Semins  |  December 11, 2020

Category: Legal News

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Nationstar Mortgage is being challenged legally.

Nationstar Mortgage agreed to settle an action commenced by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for $91 million to resolve allegations surrounding mortgage servicing misconduct and deceptive practices that resulted in financial harm to borrowers.

The proposed settlement was filed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia on Dec. 7, 2020. If approved by the court, the stipulated judgment will resolve a number of claims raised by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and Attorneys General in every state against Nationstar Mortgage concerning wrongful conduct in connection with the servicer’s alleged compliance violations and purported history of operational failure.

According to the complaint filed by the CFPB, Nationstar Mortgage — also known as Mr. Cooper — engaged in alleged misconduct and abusive mortgage servicing practices spanning from 2012 to 2015 in violation of the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010. The complaint states that the company serviced nearly two million loans in 2014 and currently services loans for three million borrowers with a total of roughly $500 billion in unpaid principal loan balances.

Specifically, the complaint alleges that Nationstar Mortgage, the third-largest mortgage servicer in the U.S., violated the law by improperly increasing permanently modified monthly loan payments, wrongfully foreclosing on mortgages, failing to honor loan modification agreements, and mismanaging escrow accounts.

According to the CFPB’s complaint, the mortgage servicer also failed to remove private mortgage insurance timely from accounts under the Homeowner’s Protection Act (HPA), as well as pay property tax disbursements on time in violation of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA).

Despite its written promises, Nationstar Mortgage “initiated foreclosures and even sold borrowers’ homes while the borrowers’ loss mitigation applications or appeals were pending,” as alleged in the CFPB’s complaint. The complaint also maintains that there was at least one instance in which a borrower had accepted a modified mortgage and was wrongfully foreclosed upon, despite performing on the mortgage. In other instances, as stated in the complaint, borrowers met the criteria for permanent modifications of their mortgages but the company increased payments wrongfully, resulting in foreclosure on some borrowers.

The CFPB’s complaint also says that the mortgage servicer failed to analyze escrow accounts, creating shortages in the accounts of borrowers who were making mortgage payments in accordance with a Chapter 13 bankruptcy plan approved by the court. The complaint contends that Nationstar Mortgage would then initiate attempts to collect on the deficiencies without getting the required permission from the bankruptcy court.

Additionally, the Attorneys General allege in their complaint that the mortgage servicer violated state consumer protection laws which prohibit unfair practices and deceptive acts, as well as the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010.

The settlement came after a multi-year investigation which involved the efforts of the CFPB and state bank regulators.

Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation Secretary Deborah Hagan stated in a CFPB press release, “This settlement demonstrates the crucial role of state financial services regulators in ensuring that homeowners are protected as they obtain and pay down their mortgages—especially homeowners who may be struggling with making their payments.”

In a statement concerning the settlement, Jay Bray, president and CEO of Nationstar Mortgage remarked, “We are pleased to resolve this matter. When these issues were identified several years ago, we immediately made restitution to our impacted customers and invested in process improvements to prevent reoccurrence.”

Nationstar Mortgage is being challenged legally.What Are the Terms of the CFPB’s Settlement Agreement with Nationstar Mortgage?

As part of the settlement, Nationstar Mortgage is required to enhance its error resolution policies and processes for handling consumer complaints.

The stipulation mandates that the mortgage servicer maintain a consumer complaint form online that is accessible to borrowers, and provide accurate information to borrowers concerning how they may submit their complaints. Additionally, the company must accurately indicate each error identified in a borrower’s complaint and communicate the corrections made to the borrower.

The settlement agreement also includes provisions for proper escrow management and analysis, servicing transfers, loss mitigation practices, communications concerning private mortgage insurance cancelations, as well as an annual lookback and redress plan.

Nationstar Mortgage must also submit a compliance plan to the regional director outlining the steps the mortgage servicer will be taking to ensure the actions mandated in the agreement are effectively carried out.

The $91,255,843 settlement will allot over $22 million in consumer remediation, in addition to the $62 million in remediation that was previously provided to consumer borrowers. Under the agreement, Nationstar Mortgage must also pay out $1,205,000 to the participating states in administrative costs and penalties, $3,860,900 in attorneys’ fees, investigative costs and fees pursuant to the Attorney General Consent Judgment and $1.5 million in civil monetary penalties to the CFPB.

The Nationstar Mortgage Settlement is The State of Alabama, et al. v. Nationstar Mortgage LLC, Case No. 1:20-cv-03551 and Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection v. Nationstar Mortgage, Case No. Case 1:20-cv-03550 filed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.

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If you are a California resident who has had a dispute in the last year with one of these banks over billing, past due payments, foreclosure or interest rates, you may be eligible to join a free class action lawsuit investigation:

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54 thoughts onNationstar Mortgage Agrees to $91M Settlement with the CFPB

  1. SHERRI BOARDLEY says:

    HELLO SIR/MADAM, I HAVE ALREADY SIGNED UP OVER A YEAR AGO. SHOULD I HAVE RECEIVED ANY PAPERWORK AT THIS POINT?

    THANK YOU,

  2. Stephanie Babcock says:

    I need to be added to this Class Action lawsuit. I have been fighting these people for 6 years. I have hired an attorney just to talk to them and help me with the modification papers. I have signed the papers 6 times and they’ve lied and said they weren’t signed properly, they came in late, they weren’t formatted properly (which they were the ones that sent us the forms.) They’ve tried to foreclose on my home at least 8 times, maybe more. They’ve refused my my payments consistently. I was forced into Chapter 13 in order to try and save my home. Which I totally regret at this point! That was supposedly to get them to have to except my payments. When this all started, my husband passed away, I hired an attorney to do probate and they’ve chosen to ignore probate findings. To this day I can’t access my mortgage and I get NO statements. I only owed $100,000. on my property when this started, now with all their fees they have it up to 149,000 + whatever they want to add on. They send people out to my property taking pictures all the time and everytime they charge 2,000 to 8,000 in fees. I can’t deal with this anymore! Please help me. I need an attorney in the state of Florida to sue these people!

  3. Phelicia Abrams says:

    Please add me…I am the estate for my deceased parents home.

  4. Adriana says:

    Yo no estoy atrasada en los pagos y ahora me notificó banco de América que vendió la deuda a esta Nationstar Mortgage

  5. Patricia A Huber says:

    I do want to join this class action. I have been lied to and lied about. I have been told the most ridiculous things about how the paperwork is not sent in properly. I was granted a loan modification and paid the first payment on October 3, 2021 and they lied and said the modification was denied because the payment had to be in by October 9, 2021 to make the modification approved and they did not receive. I have proof of my bank statement that this was accepted on October 2, 2021 and also the statement from Mr. Cooper who subsequently applied the “trial payment amount” and added to money that was in a suspended account to make a mortgage payment for October. This is not all. I have proof of the many, many underhanded things and lies told by Mr. Cooper. They drove me to suicidal ideation and I was on the phone speaking with someone from HUD that I thought could help me and she called 911 and the Sheriff’s office sent a police officer and EMS to my house and took me to the Psych Ward. After I proved that they lied about the loan modification agreement they changed the story that the VA mortgage I have was not assumable because it was only in my husband’s name who died March 21, 2019. They said the VA would not allow me to assume that. I proved that I was the 100% successor from Probate papers signed and notarized in August and Mr. Cooper sent a letter that was a “copy” of what they claimed to have sent me in February including their condolences for my loss. They said I was deemed as the 100% successor on a date that was previous to the August date that I had gotten the probate papers showing that I was 100% successor, which obviously was a lie because that was before the time I actually did receive the papers showing I was 100% successor in interest in August. I have more that I can send in and prove. The last communication I received was stating they were “investigating” and I would hear back on October 13, 2021, which as of now, October 17, 2021, has not come to me. I tried to get into the Website for my account and it is shut down because the password has expired.

    Sorry, there is more. I hope someone will contact me before I get “pushed over the edge” again.

  6. Blanche Jenkins says:

    Please add me

  7. Andrea says:

    I would like to be contacted. I was forced out of modification and into deed in lieu after threat of foreclosure.

  8. Larry Carson says:

    add me

  9. Carla Downs says:

    Please add me to the list. I have also been defrauded by Nationstar.

    1. Dallas Baxter says:

      I know me and my wife was done wrong with our house I been waiting for these people to be gotten its not right

  10. Teresa Roberts says:

    Please add. Even though I was on a payment plan, they still reported me as late.

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