A Federal
Judge has temporarily halted a foreclosure in order to rule on Colorado’s
unique and likely unconstitutional foreclosure law.
US District
Court Judge William Martinez has set a hearing on Colorado’s qualified holder
law for May 15, 2013. Martinez will take
arguments regarding the Colorado foreclosure statute allowing an attorney to
state that his client has standing to foreclose on a property.
Colorado Revised
Statutes, section 38‑38‑101(6)(a) states that proper evidence of an indorsement
or assignment of a debt shall include the original indorsement or assignment or
a certified copy thereof recorded in the county where the property is located.
Section 38‑38‑101(6)(b),
however, allows for the presentation of a copy of the indorsement or assignment
together with a statement by his attorney that the copy is true and correct.
A copy of
the original note and deed can usually be obtained from the clerk and recorder’s
office. Anyone can go online and obtain
such a copy, so that’s not conclusive evidence of standing.
In order to
prove that the copy is a true and accurate copy of the original, not just a
downloaded version, the court needs to hear testimony from someone who has
first-hand knowledge regarding the original and copied versions of the
documents.
Normally a
witness can be examined about the veracity of his statements. Simple questions about a note would include ‘when
did you see the original?’, ‘where did you see the original?’, ‘when was the
copy made?’, ‘who made the copy?’, and ‘have you compared the copy and the
original side-by-side?’.
In Colorado,
however, according to the State’s foreclosure statute, the court must accept the
foreclosing party’s attorney’s statement as true.
Our
Constitutional right to due process requires that we receive a reasonable process
before other rights are denied. This generally
means that one who wishes to take something from me must show that he has the
right to do so and I have a right to contest his assertions.
In the case
of a foreclosure, the foreclosing party must prove that he owns the note on
which he is foreclosing. I have the
right to contest his assertion that he owns the note.
In Colorado,
a mortgage company can simply produce a copy of a note and have their attorney
state that is a true and correct copy. I
cannot contest the attorney’s assertion of the truthfulness of the copy.
This is unconstitutional
and needs to be removed from Colorado’s laws.
Borrowers’ rights under the Due Process clause to the US Constitution to
examine any evidence put before the court must be restored.
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