Source: https://www.scribd.com/document/124006148/Kentucky-Recorders-v-MERS-et-al-Amended-Complaint
Timestamp: 2017-11-18 21:47:43
Document Index: 25188299

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 69', '§ 67', '§ 1332', '§ 1331', '§ 1452', '§ 1391', '§ 99', '§ 64', '§ 64', '§ 382', '§ 382', '§ 382', '§ 382', '§ 382', '§ 434', '§ 382', '§ 382', '§ 382']

Kentucky Recorders v MERS et al Amended Complaint | Mortgage Loan | Assignment (Law)
Description: Kentucky County Recorders would like to be paid for the statutorily mandated recording fees they are due on assignments of mortgages by and to MERS' members and non-members.
Kentucky County Recorders would like to be paid for the statutorily mandated recording fees they are due on assignments of mortgages by and to MERS' members and non-members.
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY AT ASHLAND
BOYD COUNTY, ex rel Phillip Hedrick, County Attorney of Boyd County, Kentucky, BREATHITT COUNTY, ex rel Brendon Miller, County Attorney of Breathitt County, Kentucky, CARTER COUNTY, ex rel Patrick Flannery, County Attorney of Carter County, Kentucky, CHRISTIAN COUNTY, ex rel J. Michael Foster, County Attorney of Christian County, Kentucky, CLARK COUNTY, ex rel Brian Thomas, County Attorney of Clark County, Kentucky, FLOYD COUNTY, ex rel Keith Bartley, County Attorney of Floyd County, Kentucky, FRANKLIN COUNTY, ex rel Rick Sparks, County Attorney of Franklin County, Kentucky, GREENUP COUNTY, ex rel Michael Wilson, County Attorney of Greenup County, Kentucky, JOHNSON COUNTY, ex rel Michael Endicott, County Attorney of Johnson County, Kentucky, LETCHER COUNTY, ex rel Jamie Hatton, County Attorney of Letcher County, Kentucky, MAGOFFIN COUNTY, ex rel Greg Allen, County Attorney of Magoffin County, Kentucky, MASON COUNTY, ex rel John Estill, County Attorney of Mason County, Kentucky, PIKE COUNTY, ex rel Howard Keith Hall, County Attorney of Pike County, Kentucky, WARREN COUNTY, ex rel Amy Milliken, County Attorney of Warren County, Kentucky, BALLARD COUNTY, ex rel Vicki Hayden, County Attorney of Ballard County, Kentucky, BARREN COUNTY, ex rel Jeffrey S. Sharp, County Attorney of Barren County, Kentucky, BOONE COUNTY, ex rel Robert Neace, County Attorney of Boone County, Kentucky, CARLISLE COUNTY, ex rel Michael Hogancamp, County Attorney of Carlisle County, Kentucky, ESTILL COUNTY, ex rel Rodney Davis, County Attorney of Estill County, Kentucky, GARRARD COUNTY, ex rel Mark Metcalf, County Attorney of Garrard County, Kentucky, HANCOCK COUNTY, ex rel Paul Madden, Jr., County
No. 0:12-cv-33 Judge Henry R. Wilhoit, Jr.
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Attorney of Hancock County, Kentucky, HARLAN COUNTY, ex rel Fred Busroe, Jr., County Attorney of Harlan County, Kentucky, HART COUNTY, ex rel Mike Nichols, County Attorney of Hart County, Kentucky, HENRY COUNTY, ex rel Virginia Harrod, County Attorney of Henry County, Kentucky, HICKMAN COUNTY, ex rel Sue Ellen Morris, County Attorney of Hickman County, Kentucky, LARUE COUNTY, ex rel Dale M. Morris, County Attorney of LaRue County, Kentucky, LAUREL COUNTY, ex rel Jodi L. Albright, County Attorney of Laurel County, Kentucky, LEWIS COUNTY, ex rel Thomas M. Bertram, County Attorney of Lewis County, Kentucky, LOGAN COUNTY, ex rel Joseph E. Ross, County Attorney of Logan County, Kentucky, MENIFEE COUNTY, ex rel Greg Hall, County Attorney of Menifee County, Kentucky, MONROE COUNTY, ex rel Wes Stephens, County Attorney of Monroe County, Kentucky, MONTGOMERY COUNTY, ex rel Kevin Clay Cockrell, County Attorney of Montgomery County, Kentucky, NELSON COUNTY, ex rel John Kelly, Jr., County Attorney of Nelson County, Kentucky, NICHOLAS COUNTY, ex rel Dawn Letcher, County Attorney of Nicholas County, Kentucky, OHIO COUNTY, ex rel Gregory Hill, County Attorney of Ohio County, Kentucky, OLDHAM COUNTY, ex rel John K. Carter, County Attorney of Oldham County, Kentucky, PERRY COUNTY, ex rel John Shackleford, County Attorney of Perry County, Kentucky, ROCKCASTLE COUNTY, ex rel William Reynolds, County Attorney of Rockcastle County, Kentucky, SPENCER COUNTY, ex rel Ruth A. Hollan, County Attorney of Spencer County, Kentucky, TRIMBLE COUNTY, ex rel Perry Arnold, County Attorney of Trimble County, Kentucky, WOLFE COUNTY, ex rel Stephen R. Johnson, County Attorney of Wolfe County, Kentucky,
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v. MERSCORP, INC., MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEM, INC., MERSCORP HOLDINGS, INC., AMERICAN LAND TITLE ASSOCIATION, BANK OF AMERICA, CCO MORTGAGE CORPORATION, JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, CITIMORTGAGE, INC., CRE FINANCIAL COUNCIL, AS SUCCESSOR TO COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE SECURITIES ASSOCIATION, CORELOGIC, CORINTHIAN MORTGAGE CORPORATION, EVERHOME MORTGAGE COMPANY, N/K/A EVERBANK, FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE CORPORATION (“FREDDIE MAC”), FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION (“FANNIE MAE”), FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE CO., GMAC RESIDENTIAL FUNDING CORPORATION, BBVA COMPASS BANCSHARES AS SUCCESSOR TO GUARANTY BANK, HSBC FINANCE CORPORATION, MERRILL LYNCH CREDIT CORPORATION, MGIC INVESTOR SERVICES CORPORATION, MORTGAGE BANKERS ASSOCIATION INC., NATIONWIDE ADVANTAGE MORTGAGE COMPANY, PMI MORTGAGE INSURANCE COMPANY, STEWART TITLE GUARANTY COMPANY, SUNTRUST MORTGAGE, INC., UNITED GUARANTY CORPORATION, WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., LENDER PROCESSING SERVICES, INC., AND RECONTRUST, INC. DEFENDANTS.
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Plaintiffs, by and through undersigned counsel, on behalf of themselves and all other Kentucky counties, for their class action complaint against the above-captioned defendants, state as follows: PARTIES AND JURISDICTION 1. This is a class action pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23 commenced by Plaintiffs Boyd
County, Breathitt County, Carter County, Christian County, Clark County, Floyd County, Franklin County, Greenup County, Johnson County, Letcher County, Magoffin County, Mason County, Pike County, Warren County, Ballard County, Barren County, Boone County, Carlisle County, Estill County, Garrard County, Hancock County, Harlan County, Hart County, Henry County, Hickman County, LaRue County, Laurel County, Lewis County, Logan County, Menifee County, Monroe County, Montgomery County, Nelson County, Nicholas County, Ohio County, Oldham County, Perry County, Rockcastle County, Spencer County, Trimble County and Wolfe County on behalf of themselves and all other Kentucky counties. This class action has been brought because Defendants deliberately have failed to record required mortgage assignments in the proper Kentucky county recording offices, have deprived each county and the Commonwealth of Kentucky of recording fees required by Kentucky law, have filed false mortgage documents, and have deprived mortgagees of their statutorily required notice of mortgage assignments. 2. Plaintiff Boyd County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Phillip Hedrick, as County Attorney of Boyd County, sues on behalf of Boyd County and all other Kentucky Counties.
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Plaintiff Breathitt County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, J. Michael Foster, as County Attorney of Christian County, sues on behalf of Christian County and all other Kentucky Counties. 6. Plaintiff Clark County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Michael Wilson, as County Attorney of Greenup County, sues on behalf of Greenup County and all other Kentucky Counties.
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Plaintiff Johnson County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Greg Allen, as County Attorney of Magoffin County, sues on behalf of Magoffin County and all other Kentucky Counties. 13. Plaintiff Mason County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Amy Milliken, as County Attorney of Warren County, sues on behalf of Warren County and all other Kentucky Counties. 16. Plaintiff Ballard County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Vicki Hayden, as County Attorney of Ballard County, sues on behalf of Ballard County and all other Kentucky Counties.
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Plaintiff Barren County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Jeffrey S. Sharp, as County Attorney of Barren County, sues on behalf of Barren County and all other Kentucky Counties. 18. Plaintiff Boone County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Robert D. Neace, as County Attorney of Boone County, sues on behalf of Boone County and all other Kentucky Counties. 19. Plaintiff Carlisle County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Michael Hogancamp, as County Attorney of Carlisle County, sues on behalf of Carlisle County and all other Kentucky Counties. 20. Plaintiff Estill County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Rodney Davis, as County Attorney of Estill County, sues on behalf of Estill County and all other Kentucky Counties. 21. Plaintiff Garrard County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Mark Metcalf, as County Attorney of Garrard County, sues on behalf of Garrard County and all other Kentucky Counties. 22. Plaintiff Hancock County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Paul Madden, Jr., as County Attorney of Hancock County, sues on behalf of Hancock County and all other Kentucky Counties. 23. Plaintiff Harlan County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Fred Busroe, Jr., as County Attorney of Harlan County, sues on behalf of Harlan County and all other Kentucky Counties.
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Plaintiff Hart County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Mike Nichols, as County Attorney of Hart County, sues on behalf of Hart County and all other Kentucky Counties. 25. Plaintiff Henry County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Virginia L. Harrod, as County Attorney of Henry County, sues on behalf of Henry County and all other Kentucky Counties. 26. Plaintiff Hickman County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Sue Ellen Morris, as County Attorney of Hickman County, sues on behalf of Hickman County and all other Kentucky Counties. 27. Plaintiff LaRue County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Dale M. Morris, as County Attorney of LaRue County, sues on behalf of LaRue County and all other Kentucky Counties. 28. Plaintiff Laurel County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Jodi L. Albright, as County Attorney of Laurel County, sues on behalf of Laurel County and all other Kentucky Counties. 29. Plaintiff Lewis County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Thomas M. Bertram, as County Attorney of Lewis County, sues on behalf of Lewis County and all other Kentucky Counties. 30. Plaintiff Logan County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Joseph E. Ross, as County Attorney of Logan County, sues on behalf of Logan County and all other Kentucky Counties.
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Plaintiff Menifee County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Greg Hall, as County Attorney of Menifee County, sues on behalf of Menifee County and all other Kentucky Counties. 32. Plaintiff Monroe County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Wes Stephens, as County Attorney of Monroe County, sues on behalf of Monroe County and all other Kentucky Counties. 33. Plaintiff Montgomery County is situated within the boundaries of the
Commonwealth of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Kevin Clay Cockrell, as County Attorney of Montgomery County, sues on behalf of Montgomery County and all other Kentucky Counties. 34. Plaintiff Nelson County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, John Kelly, Jr., as County Attorney of Nelson County, sues on behalf of Nelson County and all other Kentucky Counties. 35. Plaintiff Nicholas County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Dawn C. Letcher, as County Attorney of Nicholas County, sues on behalf of Nicholas County and all other Kentucky Counties. 36. Plaintiff Ohio County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Gregory Hill, as County Attorney of Ohio County, sues on behalf of Ohio County and all other Kentucky Counties. 37. Plaintiff Oldham County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, John K. Carter, as County Attorney of Oldham County, sues on behalf of Oldham County and all other Kentucky Counties.
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Plaintiff Perry County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, John Shackleford, as County Attorney of Perry County, sues on behalf of Perry County and all other Kentucky Counties. 39. Plaintiff Rockcastle County is situated within the boundaries of the
Commonwealth of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, William Reynolds, as County Attorney of Rockcastle County, sues on behalf of Rockcastle County and all other Kentucky Counties. 40. Plaintiff Spencer County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Ruth A. Hollan, as County Attorney of Spencer County, sues on behalf of Spencer County and all other Kentucky Counties. 41. Plaintiff Trimble County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Perry Arnold, as County Attorney of Trimble County, sues on behalf of Trimble County and all other Kentucky Counties. 42. Plaintiff Wolfe County is situated within the boundaries of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky. Pursuant to KRS § 69.210, Stephen R. Johnson, as County Attorney of Wolfe County, sues on behalf of Wolfe County and all other Kentucky Counties. 43. Each of the Plaintiffs are acting through their respective County Attorneys under
the authority of their Fiscal Courts pursuant to KRS § 67.080. 44. Defendant MERSCORP., INC. is a Delaware corporation which maintains its
principal place of business at 1818 Library Street, Suite 300, Reston, Virginia 20190. As a national organization, this Defendant conducts business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. 45. Defendant Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS”) is a
Delaware corporation, and a national organization which conducts business in the
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Commonwealth of Kentucky. MERS has its principal place or business located at 1818 Library Street, Reston, Virginia 20191. 46. Defendant MERSCORP Holdings, Inc. is a Delaware corporation, and a national
organization which conducts business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. MERSCORP Holdings, Inc. has its principal place or business located at 1818 Library Street, Reston, Virginia 20191. 47. Defendant American Land Title Association is a national trade association with
its principal place of business located at 1828 L Street, N.W., Suite 705, Washington, DC 20036, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/title business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. 48. Defendant Bank of America, N.A. is a Delaware corporation with its principal
place of business located at 100 N. Tryon St., Charlotte, NC 28255, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 49. Defendant CCO Mortgage Corporation (CCO) (f/k/a American Home Funding,
Inc. and Charter One Mortgage Corporation), a division of RBS Citizens, N.A. and a subsidiary of Citizens Financial Group, Inc., is an Ohio corporation with its principal place of business located at 10561 Telegraph Road, Glen Allen, Virginia 23059 and, according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 50. Defendant JPMorgan Chase Bank, parent company to Chase Home Mortgage
Corporation (f/k/a Chase Home Finance), a division of Chase Bank, N.A. and J.P. Morgan Chase & Company, is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business at 270 Park Avenue,
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38th Floor, New York, New York 10017, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 51. Defendant CitiMortgage, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of CitiBank, N.A. is a
New York corporation with its principal place of business located at 1000 Technology Drive, MS 140, O’Fallon, Missouri 63304, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 52. Defendant CRE Finance Council, formerly known as the Commercial Mortgage
Securities Association, is a New York corporation and a national organization that conducts business in Kentucky. CRE Financial Council has its principal place of business located at 330 Broad Street, 30th Floor, New York, New York 10004, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” 53. Defendant CoreLogic is a Florida corporation and a national organization that
conducts business in Kentucky. CoreLogic has its principal place of business located at 4 First American Way, Santa Ana, CA 92707, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” 54. Defendant Corinthian Mortgage Corporation is a Mississippi corporation with its
principal place of business at 5750 W 95th Street, Suite 155, Overland Park, KS 66207, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 55. Defendant EverHome Mortgage Company, formerly known as Alliance Mortgage
Company, now known as EverBank, a fully owned subsidiary of EverBank Financial Corp., is a
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Florida corporation with its principal place of business located at 8100 Nations Way, Jacksonville, Florida 32256, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 56. Defendant Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (“Freddie Mac”) is a
government-sponsored enterprise with its principal place of business located at 8200 Jones Branch Drive, McLean, VA 22102-3110, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” Federal courts have original jurisdiction over this defendant. Freddie Mac owns mortgage notes secured by real estate in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 57. Defendant Federal National Mortgage Association (“Fannie Mae”) is a
government-sponsored enterprise with its principal place of business located at 3900 Wisconsin Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20016-2892, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It owns mortgage notes secured by real estate in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 58. Defendant First American Title Insurance Co. is a California corporation with its
principal place of business located at 1 First American Way, Santa Ana CA 92707, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts title insurance business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 59. Defendant GMAC Residential Funding Corporation (d/b/a GMAC Bank, GMAC
Commercial Mortgage Corp., GMAC Mortgage, GMAC Mortgage Corp., GMAC Mortgage LLC), a wholly owned subsidiary of Ally Financial, Inc., is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business located at 8400 Normandale Lake Blvd., Minneapolis, Minnesota
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55437, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 60. Defendant BBVA Compass Bancshares, Inc. as successor to Guaranty Bank is an
Alabama corporation with its principal place of business at 15 South 20th Street, Birmingham, AL 35233, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 61. Defendant HSBC Finance Corporation is a Delaware corporation with its
principal place of business at 26525 N. Riverwoods Blvd., Mettawa, Illinois 60045, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 62. Defendant Merrill Lynch Credit Corporation is a Delaware corporation with its
principal place of business at 4804 Deer Lake Drive East, Jacksonville, Florida 32246, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 63. Defendant MGIC Investor Services Corporation is a Wisconsin corporation with
its principal place of business located at 250 E. Kilbourn Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53202, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage insurance business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 64. Defendant Nationwide Advantage Mortgage Company (d/b/a Nationwide Bank,
Nationwide Mortgage Concepts, Inc., Nationwide Mortgage Corp.), is an Iowa corporation with its principal place of business located at 1100 Locust Street, Dept. 2009, Des Moines, Iowa
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50391, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 65. Defendant PMI Mortgage Insurance Company is an Arizona corporation with its
principal place of business located at 3003 Oak Road, Walnut Creek CA 94597, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage insurance business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 66. Defendant Stewart Title Guaranty Company is a Texas corporation with its
principal place of business located at 1980 Post Oak Boulevard, Suite 800, Houston, Texas 77056, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgagerelated business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 67. Defendant SunTrust Mortgage, Inc. is a Virginia corporation with its principal
place of business located at 901 Semmes Avenue, Richmond, Virginia 23224, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 68. Defendant United Guaranty Corporation is a North Carolina corporation with its
principal place of business located at 230 North Elm Street, Greensboro NC 27420, and according to www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage insurance business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 69. Defendant Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. (d/b/a Americas Mortgage Outsource
Program), is a national bank that is set up under the laws of United States with its principal place of business at 101 N. Phillips Avenue, Sioux Falls, South Dakota 57104, and according to
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www.mersinc.org, is a shareholder in “MERS.” It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 70. Defendant Lender Processing Services, Inc., is a Delaware corporation with its
principal place of business at 601 Riverside Ave., Jacksonville FL 32204. It conducts mortgagerelated business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 71. Defendant ReconTrust Company , NA, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Bank of
America with its principal place of business at 2380 Performance Drive, Richardson, TX 75082. It conducts mortgage/banking business in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this Court. 72. This Court has jurisdiction over this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2)
because the amount in controversy is greater than $5 million and the Plaintiffs are all citizens of Kentucky and Defendants are not citizens of Kentucky. This Court also has jurisdiction of this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331, made applicable by 12 U.S.C. § 1452(f), because Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation is a defendant herein. 73. Venue is proper in this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1391 because a substantial
portion of the events giving rise to the claims herein occurred in this judicial district. FACTS 74. For hundreds of years, the combination of recorded deeds, recorded mortgages,
and recorded mortgage assignments have provided the public in Kentucky with the tools necessary to effectuate real estate transactions with the knowledge that all potential interests in the property have been addressed with legal finality. The county recording system in Kentucky has been in place since the Commonwealth joined the United States.
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Defendants have failed to record mortgage assignments in contravention of
Kentucky law depriving Kentucky counties of millions of dollars in unpaid fees for mortgage assignments. The Defendants have taken advantage of the protections afforded by Kentucky’s laws by recording mortgages in land records maintained by Kentucky’s counties while at the same time they have failed to comply with Kentucky’s laws requiring accurate information in mortgage instruments, the recording of assignments of the same mortgages, and the payment of required recording fees for the statutorily required recording of mortgage assignments. 76. Kentucky counties are charged with maintaining a property records system that
provides Kentucky citizens with accurate notice of property interests in land. Kentucky specifically requires that all mortgages be recorded in the county clerk’s office: “All deeds, mortgages and other instruments required by law to be recorded to be effectual against purchasers without notice, or creditors, shall be recorded in the county clerk’s office…” KRS 382.110(1). After the initial recording of a mortgage, Kentucky law requires that all assignments of a mortgage be recorded in the county clerk’s office, KRS 382.360(3), and that a fee be paid for each assignment by the assignee. KRS 64.012(1)(a). 77. Kentucky’s public policy for accurate, transparent, and current land records
makes it a criminal offense to file records that are forged, are groundless or contain material misstatements. Kentucky law further provides that instruments missing complete and accurate information regarding the person preparing the instrument and the address information of a person receiving an interest in the property by way of the instrument should not be received or permitted to be recorded. Defendants have participated in a scheme utilizing material misstatements of interests in mortgages filed in Kentucky and Plaintiffs no longer intend to receive such instruments for recording.
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The recording fees required to be paid by mortgage assignees are, by statute, used
to fund the counties’ land records services, and also provide funding for Kentucky’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund, a fund established to address homelessness and inadequate housing for families in Kentucky, with surpluses to go to the local county governments to help fund other services. The typical recording fee historically has been twelve dollars (for a document that is three pages or less), with six dollars designated by statute to go to the Affordable Housing Trust Fund. Accordingly, the scheme the Defendants devised and executed to circumvent paying fees for mortgage assignments have deprived Plaintiffs of funds to support both county land record services they provide for the benefit of the Defendants as well as other services and benefits for their residents. 79. To finance the purchase of real property, a borrower typically receives a loan,
often in the form of a mortgage, from an originating lender comprised of two separate documents: (1) a promissory note, which establishes the borrower’s obligation to repay the loan, and (2) the mortgage itself, which gives the lender a security interest in the borrower’s property to secure repayment of the loan. Typically, a lender will record its mortgage in the appropriate county’s public land records to reflect and protect its interest in the real property. Transfers of those interests would similarly be recorded as mortgage assignments. In 2006, the Commonwealth of Kentucky passed legislation making the recording of mortgage assignments mandatory for previously-recorded mortgages. 80. Beginning in the 1990s, securitization of mortgages became a more common
practice wherein mortgage lenders would originate as many residential mortgage loans as possible for sale to various banks and financial institutions. Those banks and financial
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institutions would, in turn, trade the mortgages amongst themselves and subsequently pool them into trusts for eventual sale to investors as mortgage-backed securities (“MBS”). 81. Securitizing a mortgage requires several assignments to be made as:
(i) originating lenders sell mortgages (each of which includes both the promissory note and the mortgage documents) to an aggregator or sponsor, which usually is a special purpose entity, often affiliated with a large financial institution or investment bank; (ii) the sponsor initiates securitization by transferring (i.e., assigning) the mortgage to a depositor; and, (iii) the depositor then transfers the mortgage to a “special purpose vehicle” (usually a trust) to be held for the eventual sale to and subsequent benefit of investors. The typical life of a securitized Kentucky mortgage, therefore, entails at least three assignments that should be recorded under Kentucky law. 82. The Defendant shareholders of Defendant Mortgage Electronic Registration
Systems, Inc. (“MERS”) established MERS in the mid-1990s to act as an electronic clearinghouse for the transfer of mortgage interests among its members expressly to avoid recording mortgage assignments with local recording systems and to avoid paying requisite recording fees. The MERS system circumvents the mortgage assignment recordation system of Kentucky’s counties by facilitating the selling and buying of notes secured by real property without complying with Kentucky’s requirements for the recordation of mortgage assignments. As stated on its website, “MERS eliminates the need to prepare and record assignments when trading residential and commercial mortgage loans.” See http://www.mersinc.org/ (last viewed November 14, 2011). 83. Defendants herein include MERS shareholders, MERS members and other real
estate transaction participants who caused and aided and abetted MERS to act as a privately run
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mortgage recording system for its members to the detriment of the Plaintiffs, the class the Plaintiffs seek to represent, and the citizens of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. MERS from the outset anticipated depriving local land recording systems of millions of dollars in recording fees and estimated that its scheme would save its members $77 to $200 million annually nationwide. 84. MERS was devised to increase profits in the primary and secondary mortgage
market, and to facilitate securitization of mortgages through the rapid assignment of mortgages between financial institutions. MERS maintains a private computer system that allows its users to, among other things, register and track changes in ownership interests in mortgages outside the applicable state or county property recording systems (while at the same taking advantage of those systems by recording mortgages in the first instance). Mortgagor property owners and other non-members, however, cannot access the private MERS system. Members pay MERS membership fees to register and track mortgage ownership interests and servicing rights on the MERS system, and fees for each transaction conducted, instead of paying recording fees to state and county governments. 85. MERS members avoid recording every mortgage assignment by first recording
mortgage on which they claim “MERS” as their agent through a series of designations, such as “MERS as assignee,” “MERS as nominee,” or “MERS as beneficiary.” Once “MERS land instruments” – such as mortgages and mortgage assignments – are recorded in county land records and purportedly registered on the MERS private system (either as a mortgage or mortgage assignment), MERS members usually do not record subsequent, intermediate mortgage assignments. They often only record a mortgage assignment when MERS members seek to initiate a terminating event (e.g., foreclosure when the mortgage is in default, or release when the mortgage is refinanced or otherwise satisfied).
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By circumventing Kentucky’s county recording requirements, the Defendants
have evaded, and continue to evade, the requirement for recordation of mortgage assignments and have evaded, and continue to evade, paying the attendant recording fees. Upon information and belief, MERS is, or has been, the “assignee” or “nominee” or “beneficiary” on hundreds of thousands of mortgages recorded in Kentucky and the Defendants have not paid fees to record mortgage assignments multiple times for each such mortgage. 87. Franklin County land records and public filings for one mortgage sold into a
mortgage-backed security illustrate how assignments take place but are not recorded by the participants in the MERS scheme, as follows:  In March of 2006, “Couple X” bought a home in Franklin County. Their lender, Mortgage Lenders Network USA, Inc. identified MERS in the mortgage instrument as its nominee.  A mortgage assignment was recorded in the Franklin County Clerk’s office in June 2011 stating that MERS, as nominee for Mortgage Lenders Network USA, Inc. assigned the mortgage to U.S. Bank, NA, as Trustee for RASC 2006-EMX4.  Mortgage Lenders Network USA, however, ceased all lending and servicing operations shortly after it filed for bankruptcy in February 2007. Pursuant to the RASC 2006-EMX4 prospectus, the originator had sold mortgage loans to Residential Funding Corporation which then sold the mortgage loans to Residential Asset Securities Corporation which then sold the mortgage loans to Trustee U.S. Bank that were ultimately held by Wells Fargo Bank as custodian.  The subject note was assigned at least three times, but only a single assignment, executed by an employee of Wells Fargo Bank as an Assistant Secretary of MERS, was filed more than five years later. This illustration is typical of the path of mortgage assignments not recorded by the Defendants, which number in the thousands.
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The Defendants simultaneously take advantage of the county land records systems
to protect their property interests while deliberately not fulfilling their concomitant statutory obligations to file mortgage assignments. Kentucky counties operate registration systems that protect lien priority where MERS acts as nominee, but the Defendants do not provide the public with notice of assignments within MERS and have failed to pay statutorily required fees to support the system that protects their interests. 89. Kentucky law mandates that a certain portion of recording fees fund county
expenses while another portion is earmarked for the Kentucky Affordable Housing Trust. As a direct result of the Defendants’ failure to pay fees for mortgage assignments, every Kentucky county has been deprived of revenue needed to maintain the recording systems that lenders, including many of the Defendants, use to perfect their security interests in real estate in Kentucky. County governments that are entitled to any excess funds from county clerks’ budgets have been denied valuable resources to provide services to their residents. Moreover, Kentucky counties have been denied opportunities to collect funds from filing fees intended, by statute, to fund the affordable housing trust for grants and loans to provide low income housing opportunities for their residents. 90. The county clerk is a constitutional office created by § 99 of the Kentucky
Constitution. It is the duty of each county to budget for its clerk’s expenses, including maintaining land records, and must use fee revenue to support that budget. Any funds in excess of the budget are to be paid to the fiscal court to be used for county expenses. Through their scheme to evade paying mandatory filing fees for mortgage assignments, the Defendants have deprived counties of revenue used to fund either their land records operations or, to the extent the
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fees generated a surplus, vital county services, in addition to profiting at the expense of the revenue stream envisioned by the Kentucky legislature for the Affordable Housing Trust. 91. Regarding affordable housing, KRS § 64.012 directs that six dollars from every
fee collected for the first three pages of any mortgage-related document filed be paid to the Kentucky Affordable Housing Trust. The legislature amended KRS § 64.012 in 2006 to provide the Affordable Housing Trust, administered by the Kentucky Housing Corporation, with a permanent source of funding. This amendment occurred contemporaneously with the legislature also amending KRS 382.360 to make filing mortgage assignments mandatory. Kentucky counties have a duty to collect mortgage assignment fees to fund the Affordable Housing Trust, which provides valuable services for their low income families. 92. In 2010, the Affordable Housing Trust assisted low income families throughout
Kentucky to obtain affordable housing using just over $5 million in funding. Unfortunately, according to the Kentucky Housing Corporation, the Affordable Housing Trust required at least another $3 million to meet the needs of low income Kentucky families in 2010. Meanwhile, in 2010 in Franklin County, more than 600 mortgages were recorded with MERS as nominee. Assuming Franklin County is representative of Kentucky counties, MERS in 2010 was the nominee on mortgages at the rate of 28 per 1,000 housing units, or 54,000 mortgages Kentuckywide, potentially depriving the Affordable Housing Trust of more than $1 million in 2010 alone from unfiled assignments. 93. Because the MERS database is a private system, it hides chain of title problems,
and does not create a system of records accessible by the public that can easily resolve disputes. The point of mortgage assignment recording statutes is to create a public record of who owns the security interest in a particular piece of property. The recording laws considered together create a
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system for determining who has enforceable rights regarding the land within a state’s boundaries and, as such, establish a dispute resolution method. 94. It is part of a county’s inherent powers to manage the land within its boundaries
and the MERS business model affects every Kentucky county’s ability to manage its land records. Any MERS error in documenting note transfers frustrates the ability of individuals to transfer property. It further subjects any chain of title dispute to a lengthy process that could otherwise be avoided by use of the state-mandated recording and priority system. INDIVIDUAL AND CLASS ALLEGATIONS 95. by reference. 96. Plaintiffs bring this action pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23 on behalf of themselves The allegations of paragraphs 1-87 above are re-alleged and incorporated herein
and all others similarly situated. The class consists of all counties by and through their County Attorneys located in the Commonwealth of Kentucky where the Defendants have failed to record mortgage assignments and pay applicable fees for said recordings of mortgages pursuant to KRS 382.360 and KRS 64.012(1)(a). 97. Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(a), Plaintiffs may sue the Defendants as
representatives of a class because (a) the class is so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable, (b) there are questions of law or fact common to the class, (c) the claims or defenses of the representative parties are typical of the claims or defenses of the class, and (d) the representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class. 98. There are 120 counties in the Commonwealth of Kentucky and, thus, the members
of the class are so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable.
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There are questions of law and fact which are common to all members of the
class, and those questions predominate over any question affecting only individual class members. 100. The principal common issues are whether Defendants violated KRS §§ 382-360
and 434.155; whether Defendants conspired to violate KRS §§ 382.360 and 434.155 by their use of Defendant MERS; whether Defendants committed fraud; and whether Defendants were unjustly enriched by their conduct. 101. Two additional common issues are (a) whether the Plaintiffs and the class of
individuals that Plaintiffs seek to represent are entitled to an order declaring that these practices, as described above, are in violation of KRS § 382.360; and (b) the appropriate amount of damages and other relief to be granted to Plaintiffs and the class of individuals that Plaintiffs seek to represent. 102. The only individual questions concern the computation of the relief to be afforded
each class member which can be determined by a ministerial examination of the relevant files. 103. Plaintiffs’ claims are typical of the claims of the potential class members. All are
based on the same legal and remedial theories. 104. Plaintiffs will fairly and adequately protect the interests of all class members in
the prosecution of this action and in the administration of all matters relating to claims stated herein. Plaintiffs are similarly situated with the members of the class that Plaintiffs seek to represent. Plaintiffs have retained counsel experienced in handling class action suits involving unfair business practices and consumer credit law. Neither the named Plaintiffs nor Plaintiffs’ counsel have any interest which might cause them not to vigorously pursue this action.
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Certification under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2) is appropriate. Defendants have acted
in a uniform manner toward the Plaintiffs, and the class of counties that Plaintiffs seek to represent, by violating KRS § 382.360. 106. Certification under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3) is also appropriate. A class action is
superior to other available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy, in that: a. desirable. b. class members. c. d. A failure of justice will result from the absence of a class action. The class is of moderate size and the difficulties likely to be encountered The claims of the representative plaintiffs are typical of the claims of the Concentration of the litigation concerning this matter in this Court is
in the management of a class action are not great. FIRST CLAIM – NEGLIGENT AND/OR WILLFULL VIOLATION OF KRS SECTION 382.360 107. by reference. 108. The conduct of the Defendants in this case has substantially frustrated the statute The allegations of paragraphs 1-99 above are re-alleged and incorporated herein
and has caused Plaintiffs and the class they seek to represent a loss of substantial fees that would have been collected had the statute not been violated. 109. As a proximate result of the Defendants’ negligent, willful, and wanton violations
of KRS § 382.360, Plaintiffs and the class they seek to represent have been damaged.
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SECOND CLAIM – NEGLIGENT AND/OR WILLFULL VIOLATION OF KRS SECTION 434.155 110. by reference. 111. The conduct of the Defendants in this case has violated the statute and has caused The allegations of paragraphs 1-102 above are re-alleged and incorporated herein
Plaintiffs and the class they seek to represent to incur additional time and expense resolving issues arising from the false documents recorded by the Defendants. 112. As a proximate result of the Defendants’ negligent, willful, and wanton violations
of KRS § 434.155, Plaintiffs and the class they seek to represent have been damaged. THIRD CLAIM – FRAUD 113. by reference. 114. The Defendants have knowingly developed and participated in a private mortgage The allegations of paragraphs 1-105 above are re-alleged and incorporated herein
registration scheme intended to avoid paying recording fees for mortgage assignments which misrepresented the true holders of mortgage obligations. 115. The Defendants have engaged in a regular and routine practice of falsely
representing to the county recording offices and the public the true mortgage holder in documents designating MERS as assignee, nominee or beneficiary. 116. The Defendants have systematically and purposefully misrepresented to the
Plaintiffs and to every other similarly situated Kentucky county their true interests in mortgages registered in each county’s registration system. 117. The Defendants have systematically and purposefully deprived the Plaintiffs and
every other similarly situated Kentucky county of recording fees for mortgages that they assigned to one another within the MERS system.
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FOURTH CLAIM – UNJUST ENRICHMENT 118. by reference. 119. Defendants’ actions were performed with the specific purpose of evading The allegations of paragraphs 1-110 above are re-alleged and incorporated herein
recording assignments of mortgages and to not pay expenses associated with the same. 120. As a proximate result, Plaintiffs assert that Defendants have been unjustly
enriched by this willful violation of the Commonwealth of Kentucky statutes. 121. As a proximate result of the unjust enrichment, Plaintiffs and the class they seek
to represent have been injured. Defendants’ conduct conferred a benefit upon themselves at the expense of Plaintiffs and the class they seek to represent. Defendants were fully aware of this benefit to themselves at the expense of Plaintiffs and the Plaintiffs’ class. Finally, Defendants have retained the benefit (namely, the fees saved by circumventing the recordation of assignments of mortgages when transferred) without compensating Plaintiffs and the Plaintiffs’ class. FIFTH CLAIM – CIVIL CONSPIRACY TO VIOLATE KRS §§ 382.360 AND 434.155 122. by reference. 123. Defendants in this action have conspired together to thwart the provisions of KRS The allegations of paragraphs 1-114 above are re-alleged and incorporated herein
§§ 382.360 and 434.155. 124. Defendants’ actions were done with the specific purpose to not have to record
assignments of mortgages and payment of associated expenses. 125. been damaged.
As a proximate result, Plaintiffs and the class that Plaintiffs seek to represent have
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PRAYER FOR RELIEF WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs request that this Court certify a class of counties whom Defendants have conspired against to violate KRS §§ 382.360 and 434.155; who have suffered damages due to Defendants’ negligent, willful, and wanton violations of the statute, and who have suffered damages due to Defendants’ conduct; enter judgment against Defendants, and award class-wide relief to all members of the Plaintiffs’ class, as follows: a. Find for the Plaintiffs and the Plaintiffs’ class and award compensatory
employees, and all other persons in active concert and participation with Defendants to immediately cease the practice of not recording of assignments of mortgages in the Commonwealth of Kentucky; and f. Order such other and further relief as may be just. DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 38, Plaintiffs demand a jury trial as to all issues triable by a jury.
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/s/ Sandra Spurgeon Sandra Spurgeon, Esq. 120 Prosperous Place, Suite 202 Lexington, KY 40509 Telephone: (859) 263-1860 Facsimile: (859) 263-1840 -and/s/ Erik D. Bolog Erik D. Bolog The Bolog Firm 4800 Montgomery Lane, Suite 1000 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 Telephone: (240) 542-1041 -and-
/s/ Greg Stumbo Greg Stumbo, Esq. 527 West Main Street, Suite 2 Richmond, KY 40475-1881 Phone: (859) 624-9555 Fax: (859) 624-1199 -and/s/ William F. Ryan William F. Ryan, Jr. Cameron Macdonald Whiteford Taylor & Preston, LLP 7 Saint Paul Street, Suite 1500 Baltimore, Maryland 21202-1636 Telephone: (410) 347-8700 Facsimile: (410) 223-4161 Counsel for the Plaintiffs
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