Produce the Note: Foreclosure Delay Tactic Can Encourage Lenders to Negotiate

By Admin on February 27, 2009 | Last updated on March 21, 2019

Homeowners facing foreclosure are receiving a simple piece of advice to help stall foreclosure: make the other side "produce the note." As it turns out, many lenders seeking to foreclose seem to have lost track of the original promissory notes for the mortgages in question. Though by no means a long term solution, forcing the lender to produce the note can delay foreclosure proceedings and give the lender increased incentive to negotiate.

While securitized bundles of toxic mortgages have been blamed for much of our current economic malaise, there is one bright spot they offer to some homeowners facing foreclosure. When their original lender sold off their mortgage, and it got packaged, sliced and diced into securities sold all over the world, many times the original promissory note got lost in the shuffle.

Along with others, the Consumer Warning Network is actively pushing the "produce the note" strategy as an effective means of delaying foreclosure and creating additional incentive for lenders to renegotiate payment terms.

As described in Consumer Warning Network's How-To, the strategy works as follows:

  1. After you receive notice of a foreclosure suit from a lender who claims to own your mortgage, you file a request, with the court, for production of the original promissory note.
  2. If the lender does not respond in 30 days, you file a motion to compel production of the note. This is a request that the judge order the other side to produce the note.
  3. Most often there will then be a hearing where the judge will decide whether to force them to produce the note or not. Should you win, the lender can't foreclose until they produce the note (which could prove very difficult for them). Should you lose, you would still have had the extra time in the home and perhaps the opportunity to negotiate with the lender.

Consumer Warning Network's How-To includes free forms for requesting production of the promissory note, and also for filing a motion to compel. The group warns against scams offering "produce the note" forms for a fee.

Consumer Warning Network cites an increased tendency in judges to hold lenders to the letter of the law in the surging number of foreclosure cases, including the New York Times report of an Ohio federal judge who threw out 14 cases in 2007 when investors trying to foreclose could not prove ownership. April Charney, head of foreclosure defense for the Jacksonville, Florida Area Legal Aid also uses and strongly advocates the "produce the note" strategy. As reported in the Florida Union Times, she says that for some of her clients, it has put foreclosure on hold for years.

Copied to clipboard