Subject: VERY IMPORTANT CASE: Kansas Supreme Court Validates Livinglies’ Strategies on Basic Black Letter Law
From: Christopher Brown, Esq.
To: ngarfield@msn.com
Neil,
THANK YOU FOR SENDING THIS!!
While I am at it, let me toss on some more praise for … you I cannot thank you enough for the seminar I attended in August 2008, in Los Angeles, CA. It has completely redefined my practice. While we are still the only firm in Northern Virginia doing this, we are doing it well, and making HUGE strides recently .. it has taken a year to do it, but the foreclosing law firms are FINALLY beginning to concede they have a problem.
Every trial that has come up has been continued, or the case resolved with a “good” loan mod. They have yet to put us to the test at trial, which we are eager to see happen, but our clients continue to accept the good loan mod offers that come before trial. The client is the boss, and I can’t make guarantees, so they more often than not go for the mod, but I feel it coming. We are making incredibly sound constitutional arguments (non-judicial foreclosure is violation of due process, no standing / article 3 injury for purported owner of the note/deed of trust), challenging title like no one else can (former 25 year in-house counsel for title companies on my staff since January), and raising all sorts of problems that were created by the securitization process (former NY securities atty on my staff as well).
This Kansas Sup Ct opinion closes the gap and makes us that much more confident in pursuing our clients interests.
I am ecstatic about where my firm is right now and the work we are doing. My staff, which is growing every few months, is ecstatic as well, as myself, my employees, and our families, are doing well in a recession, and we are helping families protect their homes at the same time. I could not be happier – and with this Kansas Sup Ct opinion, things are going to get better even faster.
We have gone through several different strategies, and the one we settled on, ironically, is the one you espoused in the seminar (!!), file a suit claiming they cant enforce the note, do discovery, and put the burden on them. It is funny the trials and tribulations my office has gone through to get to this point, but it has also been some of the most rewarding work of my career.
Keep up the good work .. and …
Thank you.
Anything I can do for you, all you have to do is ask.
Christopher E. Brown, Esq.
Brown, Brown & Brown, P.C.
www.metrotriallaw.net


