Ocwen V MERS
Ocwen V MERS
Ocwen V MERS
FILED
v.
INTRODUCTION
Wednesday, August 6,2008. At that time, defendant Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems,
Inc. ("MERS"), the nation's principal registry of home mortgage loans, terminated the access of
Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC ("Ocwen"), one of the nation's largest mortgage servicers, to the
"MERS System,".an electronic platform used to record and transfer interests in tens of millions
of mortgages secured by property throughout the United States. MERS's purported basis for
excluding Ocwen involves a financial dispute that MERS has refused to resolve through the
mandatory dispute resolution process specified in MERS's "Terms and Conditions," which are
part of MERS's contract with its members, hi essence, MERS seeks to use its monopoly power
and its exclusive control over access to mortgages registered on the MERS System to force
Ocwen to choose between paying an amount it does not owe, on the one hand, and facing
continued exclusion from the MERS System, on the other. Ocwen's exclusion from the MERS
System without the due process guaranteed in MERS's Terms and Conditions, if allowed to
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persist, will reduce competition significantly in the market for mortgage servicing by eliminating
one of the nation's largest mortgage servicers. Without access to MERS, Ocwen cannot compete
because it will be denied access to a business element necessary for effective competition.
2. Ocwen thus has commenced this action seeking, inter alia, an order compelling
MERS to afford Ocwen the procedural protections guaranteed in MERS's Terms and Conditions
(including arbitration), and a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction to preserve
THE PARTIES
MERS System, including both mortgages owned by Ocwen and mortgages serviced by Ocwen
for the benefit of third-party investors. Ocwen is a limited liability company the sole member of
which is Ocwen Financial Corporation, a corporation organized under the laws of Florida and
4. MERS was created by the mortgage banking industry to streamline the mortgage
process through an electronic registry system designed to eliminate the need to transfer mortgage
interests in paper form. MERS is incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware and has
its principal place of business in Reston, Virginia. MERS thus is a citizen of Delaware and
Virginia.
5. This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §
1332 because there is complete diversity of citizenship between Ocwen and MERS and the
6. This Court also has subject matter jurisdiction over this action pursuant to 28
U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1337 and 15 U.S.C. § 15. This Complaint is filed under Sections 4 and 16 of
the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. §§15 and 26, to redress injuries Ocwen has sustained and will
continue to sustain by reason of MERS's violations of Sections 1 and/or 2 of the Sherman Act,
15U.S.C.§§land2.
§ 1391(b)(l) because MERS's principal place of business is located within the Eastern District of
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
Background
8. MERS is a company that holds legal title to mortgage liens in a nominee capacity
in order to facilitate a registry system (the "MERS System"). The MERS System is an electronic
registry created by the mortgage banking industry to track transfers of ownership interests and
servicing rights in mortgage loans as such loans are bought, sold and securitized in the secondary
mortgage market.
industry (including the Federal Housing Administration, the Department of Veterans Affairs,
Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and various state housing finance agencies) for
registering the status of all interests in mortgages, including beneficial interests and servicing and
sub-servicing arrangements. The MERS System is used by virtually every major mortgage
servicer in the United States for this purpose. The MERS System is also essential to the
foreclosure process, since mortgage servicers seeking to foreclose on defaulted mortgages that
are registered on the MERS System must obtain an assignment from MERS in order to
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commence foreclosure proceedings. Without access to the MERS System, mortgage servicers
10. As of late 2006, more than 45 million mortgages were registered on the MERS
System. This represented more than 60 percent of new loan originations in the United States and
more than 30 percent of the total outstanding mortgage debt in the nation. On information and
11. Membership in MERS and access to the MERS System is a requirement of many
13. As a member of the MERS System, Ocwen rights are governed by, among other
14. Rule 1 of MERS's Rules of Membership states that MERS "shall make the
services of the [MERS System] available to any Member of MERS. A Member is defined as an
organization or natural person who has signed a Membership Agreement and is not more than 60
days past due as to the payment of any fees due and owing to MERS."
15. Rule 5 of MERS's Rules of Membership (discussed more fully below) governs
16. Rule 7 of MERS's Rules of Membership provides that, in the event of an alleged
violation of any Rule (including Rule 5's provisions concerning the payment of fees), the
member shall be provided with written notice of the alleged violation (such as nonpayment of
fees), and shall have 15 days from the date of the notice to respond in writing. Rule 7 further
provides that, following that 15-day written response period, the member shall have an additional
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30 days to cure the alleged breach before MERS imposes any sanction (such as suspension) on
the member.
17. Paragraph 13 of MERS's Terms and Conditions specifies the procedures for
resolving disputes between MERS and a MERS member such as Ocwen. Disputes are to be
resolved in the first instance "through direct negotiation with the other party. If the Dispute is
not resolved within thirty (30) days after a written demand for direct negotiation, the parties shall
attempt to resolve the Dispute through mediation. If the parties do not promptly agree on a
mediator, either party may request the then chief judge of the Circuit Court of Fairfax County,
Washington, D.C. If the mediator is unable to facilitate a settlement of the Dispute within a
reasonable period of time, as determined by the mediator, the mediator shall issue a written
statement to the parties to that effect and the aggrieved party may then seek relief in accordance
18. Paragraph 13 of the Terms and Conditions further provides that, in the event a
mediated resolution cannot be reached, disputes such as the fee dispute between Ocwen and
19. Because MERS is located in Virginia, and Ocwen is located in Florida, the MERS
Terms and Conditions is a contract in interstate commerce for purposes of the Federal
Arbitration Act.
20. MERS has excluded Ocwen from access to the MERS System based on Ocwen's
nonpayment of a disputed charge for certain mortgage servicing transfers. The basis of MERS's
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claim for the disputed charge is a set of agreements signed by Joseph DeRinaldi, an employee of
Ocwen who is not an officer of the company and has no authority to bind the company
contractually.
21. Rule 3 of MERS's Rules of Membership states that "(a) Upon request from the
Member, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. shall promptly furnish to the Member,
in accordance with the Procedures, a corporate resolution designating one or more employees of
22. Scott Anderson, a senior vice president of Ocwen, is the only designated
"certifying officer" for Ocwen with respect to the MERS System. No other employee of Ocwen
has been designated as a "certifying officer" with respect to the MERS System.
23. At all relevant times, MERS has been aware that Scott Anderson was Ocwen's
24. Neither Scott Anderson nor any other officer of Ocwen signed any agreement
with respect to the disputed charge, authorized Joseph DeRinaldi to sign any such agreement, or
was aware that Mr. DeRinaldi had signed any such agreement at the time it was signed.
25. The disputed charge at issue involves transaction fees primarily for the transfer of
servicing between an affiliate of Delta Financial Corporation ("Delta"), a MERS member, and
Ocwen. The remaining amount of the disputed charge at issue involves transaction fees for the
transfer of servicing between Ocwen and other entities that were MERS members at the time of
26. Rule 5 of MERS's Rules of Membership states that "(c) Transaction fees for the
payable by the transferor. If the transferor fails to pay such transaction fees due to bankruptcy, or
because the transferor is no longer in business or cannot otherwise be located or contacted, and
MERS has exhausted all reasonable means of collection, then the transferee shall be responsible
for the payment of those transaction fees because the transferee has received the benefit of the
service provided by MERS and is in the best position to protect itself by holding back a portion
27. hi January 2008, MERS instituted a change in its rules related to fees for
servicing transfers. Effective January 2008, MERS began charging $10 per loan to
administratively make a change to a loan on the MERS System to reflect a servicing transfer.
28. hi addition, MERS charges a $4.95 per loan "seasoned servicing transfer fee" for
transfers occurring 270 days or more from the original loan date on the loan.
Joseph DeRinaldi—and requested authorization to bill Ocwen for fees related to a transfer of
30. MERS did not inform Joseph DeRinaldi of the total amount of fees that would be
incurred for the transfer of servicing—only that the fees would be at least $10 per loan.
31. MERS knew or should have known that Joseph DeRinaldi was not authorized to
approve fees related to the MERS System, as he was not an officer of Ocwen and was not the
32. At the time the relevant mortgage servicing portfolio was transferred from Delta
to Ocwen, Delta was still in business and was not in bankruptcy. The MERS $10 fee for
administratively reflecting a servicing transfer was not in effect when the transfer of servicing
occurred.
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33. After obtaining an "authorization" from Mr. DeRinaldi, MERS assessed a $10-
per-loan charge for administratively recording the servicing transfer from the prior servicer to
Ocwen. MERS also assessed Ocwen a $4.95-per-loan charge for seasoned servicing transfer
fees for each loan it transferred. The total servicing transfer charges assessed to Ocwen by
34. On information and belief, MERS did not exhaust all reasonable means to collect
this service-transfer charge from Delta, the transferor servicer. Indeed, to Ocwen's knowledge,
MERS did not pursue any effort to collect the applicable fees from Delta, despite the
35. On information and belief, MERS did not exhaust all reasonable means to collect
this service-transfer charge from the Out Of Business Entities, who were the other transferor
servicers. Indeed, to Ocwen's knowledge, MERS did not pursue any effort to collect the
applicable fees from Out Of Business Entities, despite the requirement that it do so pursuant to
36. Ocwen has engaged in written and oral communications with MERS in an attempt
to resolve this dispute. Those attempts have been unsuccessful. Ocwen has also sent to MERS a
written demand for dispute resolution pursuant to Paragraph 13 of the MERS Terms and
Conditions. That demand has been disregarded by MERS. On the afternoon of August 6,2008,
MERS terminated Ocwen's access to the MERS System without providing any due process for
37. At the time MERS terminated Ocwen's access to the MERS system, (a) the 15-
day period for sending a written response provided in Rule 7 of MERS's Rules of Membership
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had not yet elapsed, (b) the 30-period to cure the alleged violation provided in Rule 7 of MERS's
Rules of Membership had not yet elapsed, and (c) the dispute as to whether Ocwen owes the fee
amount claimed by MERS had not yet been submitted to or decided by the dispute resolution
38. MERS acts as mortgagee of record for mortgages registered on the MERS
System. MERS also maintains physical control of notes, assignments, and other documents
relating to registered mortgages. With respect to mortgages registered on the MERS System,
MERS is the sole source of assignments and other legal documents necessary to transfer
servicing, foreclose on defaulted mortgages, and perform other servicing functions. MERS thus
is a monopolist with respect to mortgages registered on the MERS system, inasmuch as there is
no competing registry from which the documents necessary to service those mortgages can be
obtained. Given the lack of any alternative registry, MERS controls access to a business element
that is necessary for effective competition. Without access to the MERS System, Ocwen has no
ability to provide its services to the detriment of competition and the market.
39. MERS also has market power in the broader industry. As of late 2006, more than
45 million mortgages were registered on the MERS System. This represented more than 60
percent of new loan originations in the United States and more than 30 percent of the total
outstanding mortgage debt in the nation. On information and belief, this market share has
40. Because of the network characteristics of the MERS registry system. Ocwen has
43. If MERS's exclusion of Ocwen from the MERS System is permitted to stand,
even for one day, Ocwen will suffer irreparable harm, including but not limited to the following:
customers who own the mortgages it services. For example, Ocwen will be
unable to obtain the assignments that are solely available from MERS and that are
investors for whom it services mortgages, who will be forced to find back-up
being able to respond to qualified written requests submitted to it under the Real
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Compensatory Damages
Ocwen will also suffer significant financial harm from a denial of access to the MERS System
without the due process to which it is entitled under the Terms and Conditions.
45. Ocwen's compensation is based on its ability to collect payments from both
current and delinquent borrowers. Exclusion from the MERS network will impede, and in some
46. In addition, the inability to obtain assignments from the MERS System means that
Ocwen will be prevented from foreclosing on defaulted mortgages, and therefore will be
prevented from recouping foreclosure sale proceeds various advances and other costs it has
Balancing Of Harms
47. MERS would face little or no harm if this Court were to enter a temporary
restraining order and preliminary injunction. Ocwen simply seeks to compel MERS to follow its
own Rules and Terms and Conditions, which include negotiation, mediation, and arbitration of
disputes and a requirement that fees for servicing transfers be recovered from transferor rather
than transferee servicers. Indeed, MERS would actually make money if it were ordered not to
exclude or suspend Ocwen at this time, since MERS would continue to collect undisputed fees
from Ocwen—thus increasing rather than decreasing its revenue while the contractually required
48. Ocwen is likely to succeed on the merits of its claims. By excluding Ocwen from
access to the MERS System without first pursuing the dispute resolution process required in the
Terms and Conditions, which are part of the contract between Ocwen and MERS, MERS has
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breached a contract. And by using its market power and its exclusive control over access to
mortgages registered on the MERS System to force Ocwen to choose between paying a charge it
does not owe without due process and being excluded from the essential facility of the MERS
49. Moreover, in cases where "the hardship balances in favor of the plaintiff, then the
likelihood of success of the claim is displaced and the plaintiff must only show that questions
raised concerning the merits are 'so serious, substantial, difficult and doubtful, as to make them
fair ground for litigation and thus for more deliberate investigation.'" Moore v. Kempthorne, 464
F. Supp. 2d 519,525 (E.D. Va. 2006) (quoting Blackwelder Furniture Co. v. Seilig Mfg. Co., 550
F.2d .189,195 (4th Cir. 1977). As shown above, Ocwen's hardship caused by its exclusion from
the MERS System will be much greater than any potential hardship MERS would endure by
merely continuing Ocwen's membership during the pendency of the contractually required
dispute resolution process. And, also as noted above, the merits of Ocwen's case are serious and
50. Finally, the public interest strongly favors Ocwen in this case. Ocwen services
literally hundreds of thousands of mortgages that are registered on the MERS System. Ocwen's
ability to effectively interact with its customers, including mortgage lenders and homeowners
across the country, will be compromised if MERS is allowed to exclude Ocwen from the MERS
System without due process. For example, Ocwen will not be able to timely effectuate
satisfactions and assignments of mortgages, violating state laws and allowing MERS to hold
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CAUSES OF ACTION
51. Ocwen realleges and incorporates by reference each and every allegation
52. Ocwen and MERS had a contractual agreement, contained in the MERS Rules of
53. Paragraph 13 of MERS's Terms and Conditions requires that MERS follow
54. MERS has failed and refused to follow these dispute resolution procedures by
excluding Ocwen from access to the MERS System without any due process whatever, thus
55. Ocwen has been or imminently will be damaged by MERS's failure to follow
56. Ocwen realleges and incorporates by reference each and every allegation
58. The MERS electronic registry is the exclusive source of current information
relating to the assignment of ownership and/or servicing rights of mortgages registered with
MERS.
servicing rights of mortgages registered with MERS is an essential element of Ocwen's ability to
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compete in the market for mortgage servicing because Ocwen cannot perform its core mortgage
60. Essential mortgage servicing functions that depend on information stored in the
economic distress through loan modification agreements and other payment plans
61. Ocwen's exclusion from access to the MERS System will have a significant
anticompetitive effect by precluding Ocwen from performing its core business functions due to
marketplace.
restraint of trade in violation of Sections 1 and/or 2 of the Sherman Act. MERS's exclusion of
Ocwen from the MERS System without affording it any prior due process protections, let alone
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the dispute resolution procedures specified in MERS's Terms and Conditions, is a violation of
63. Ocwen realleges and incorporates by reference each and every allegation
64. If Ocwen's exclusion from the MERS System persists for even a day, it will result
in irreparable harm. The harm to Ocwen from being excluded from the MERS System greatly
outweighs the harm to MERS caused by requiring MERS to follow its own dispute resolution
procedures.
65. Ocwen is likely to succeed on the merits of its claims for the reasons described
above.
66. The public interest favors a temporary restraining order and preliminary
injunction in this case, enjoining MERS from excluding Ocwen from the MERS System until
completion of the dispute resolution procedures required under Paragraph 13 of MERS's Terms
and Conditions.
67. Ocwen realleges and incorporates by reference each and every allegation
68. The MERS Terms and Conditions constitute a contract in interstate commerce for
69. Paragraph 13 of MERS's Terms and Conditions sets out a dispute resolution
procedure, requiring that disputes that cannot be resolved through negotiation or mediation be
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submitted for final resolution by binding arbitration conducted under the Commercial Rules of
1. That this Court issue a Temporary Restraining Order and Preliminary Injunction,
restraining and enjoining MERS from excluding Ocwen from access to the MERS System
without first completing the dispute resolution procedures required under Paragraph 13 of
MERS's Terms and Conditions and requiring MERS to reinstate Ocwen's access to the MERS
2. That the Court enter an order that, if the negotiation and mediation requirements
compelled to submit its fee dispute with Ocwen to binding arbitration conducted under the
3. That the Court award such other and further relief, including costs and attorneys'
B
J/rffrey/V^Kilduff //
(Va. Bar No. 30010)
O'MELVENY & MYERS LLP
1625 Eye Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20006
Ph: (202)383-5383
Fax: (202)383-5414
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