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Trustees, Fiduciary, and Breach of Fiduciary by johngault This material deals with the duties and fiduciary of the

deed of trust trustee, breach of that fiduciary and third party breach of fiduciary. A deed of trust is a three party instrument by definition - the trustor, beneficiary, (by any other names), and the trustee. It is the trustee who may hold 1) legal (or 'bare naked'), title or 2) equitable title to the property which is the subject of the deed of trust. Some states are 'title theory' states and hold that the trustee holds legal title to the property in trust for the benefit of the beneficiary with the borrower retaining equitable title. Other states, known as 'lien theory' states, hold that the borrower retains legal title with the trustee holding equitable title for the benefit of the beneficiary. There are two forms of title: legal and equitable. The trustee's interest is limited to his duty to the terms of the deed of trust. There are no other rights conferred on the trustee. There is no provision in a deed of trust which allows the trustee to abrogate his duties, which is what is going on just now. An agent may not foreclose, at least that was not the legislative intent of the deed of trust. The beneficiary holds nothing in regard to title. So exactly to WHAT it is that MERS alleges it holds title? (Those are the words MERS uses) The rights of the beneficiary created by the deed of trust? No, that can't be it. MERS has no rights in regard to the debt. No (independent) right is or ever can be created without interest in the note. For instance, an assignment of the deed of trust without a transfer of the note is a legal nullity. The alternative is the note and deed of trust are fatally bifurcated and the note is unsecured. MERS attempts to create a form of title which does not exist as a matter of law. The debt-and-itscollateral are the province of the note owner. I don't know that a nominee of the beneficiary would be prohibited by the legislative intent in the formulation of the deed of trust as a collateral instrument, although there are reasons against it. In any event, confusion as to the identity of the beneficiary in a deed of trust has been held to invalidate the instrument. I don't believe this issue regarding 'nominee' has been fully decided, or at least there is no national consensus. However, at least two cases have addressed the matter of nominee (though not as to 'confusion'): The Kessler court and Rutland Superior Court in Vermont, 420-6-09, MERS v Johnston, etal. Regardless, there is never any evidence submitted that 'MERS' (otherwise known as members' certifying officers) has any nexus whatsoever with the note owners, mainly because there isn't any. It is the trustee and the trustee only who is contractually empowered to garner the collateral in the event of default for the owner of the note, called the beneficiary in the deed of trust, at least until MERS came along. If a deed of trust (or a statute) alleges a beneficiary may foreclose per se, there is no such thing as a deed of trust. What there is is a mortgage (wehich is a two-party instrument, not a three-party instrument) sans the judicial f/c mandates, with some bare contingencies, conditions precedent, of notice of default to the borrower. This is entirely inconsistant with the legislative intent in allowing a deed of trust as a collateral instrument avoiding judicial foreclosure. To find otherwise is to say that the legislators, when allowing the document to be used in the place of a mortgage, meant to deprive the borrower of all

safeguards and all due process. If a beneficiary could foreclose, the trustee would not be a necessary party to a deed of trust, and NO trust would have been created. This is the essence of how a deed of trust differs from a 'mortgage' (the document prior to the implementation of the deed of trust and still used in some states), and with the deed of trust and hence the 'trustee', we saw the advent of the non-judicial foreclosure. Prior to the deed of trust, mortgages were the instruments used to secure a lender's interest in a property. They generally required judicial foreclosure and in some if not all states involved rights of redemption. Lenders found this 'cumbersome', so they lobbied for the deed of trust and non-judicial foreclosure. Can a trustee act as an agent for the beneficiary? No, he can't. He's a trustee, not an agent. An agent is one who owes a ficuciary to at least one party. If the word or meaning of 'agent' had been intended, it would have been used. It's been around a long time. There must be a trustee for a trust, (not an agent). If there were NO trustee, there would be NO deed of 'trust'. To understand a deed of trust, it might be helpful to think of a line a foot long. The trustor (borrower) is at one end and the beneficiary/lender is at the other. The trustee is in the middle. Where he ISN'T is at one end or the other with either of the other two parties. In addition to defining a deed of trust, the fact that 'trustee' was used gives creedence to the dual fiduciary of the deed of trust trustee. According to case law, what makes a trustee also an agent is the amount of control the beneficiary has over the trustee. Perhaps any control makes the trustee an agent. But, importantly, this case law has only addressed 'regular' trustees and has not encompassed a deed of trust trustee, to my knowledge. A deed of trust is a special animal, and its trustee is also a special trustee. In fact, if a deed of trust trustee does not perform his obligations to the trust, he is acting as an agent and not a trustee and vitiates the trust. Agents may not foreclose; only duly appointed trustees may. To whom does the trustee owe a fiduciary? The choice of words, i.e., 'trustee' over 'agent' in the deed of trust would make it clear it is dual, that is, a deed of trust trustee owes a fiduciary to both the lender and the borrower. Case law is scant on the fiduciary of the trustee. One court, in Lewis v Jordan Investment, Inc., 725 A.2d 4955 (1999), recognized the long-standing tenet that a trustee has a dual fiduciary: "A trustee of deeds has the fiduciary obligation to comply with the powers and duties of the trust instrument, as well as the applicable statute under the District of Columbia Code. Perry v. Virginia Mortgage & Inv. Co., 412 A.2d 1194, 1197 (D.C. 1980) (citations omitted). THIS COURT HAS LONG RECOGNIZED THAT TRUSTEES OWE FIDUCIARY DUTIES TO BOTH THE NOTEHOLDER AND THE BORROWER. S & G Inv., Inc. v. Home Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass'n, 164 U.S. App. D.C. 263, 270-71 n. 21, 505 F.2d 370, 377-78 n. 21 (1974)" Another circuit's case says the trustee's fiduciary is limited to the beneficiary, a proposition I find absurd for the reasons I have cited. The deed of trust replaced a a mortgage, which had significant protections

in it for the borrower and required judicial foreclosure. While the legislators allowed the deed of trust, to accomodate the lenders' complaints regarding the time and cost of judicial foreclosure, it is unimaginable that they intended the borrower to have no safeguards, no due process whatsoever. And in that regard, today's trustees are in fact acting as the 'agent' of the alleged beneficiary and not as true trustees. When, in short, a trustee acts at the instance of an alleged beneficiary with no real evidence that the alleged beneficiary has the right to command default / foreclosure, not only is that trustee breaching his fiduciary to the borrower, he is breaching his fiduciary to the true beneficiary by not ascertaining that he is acting at the behest of the proper party. A trustee cannot be said to be acting within or meeting his fiduciary when he is not demanding and being provided evidence of the instigator's authority to command foreclosure. He is also violating the tenets of good faith and fair dealing, which are covenants arising in contract, i.e., the deed of trust. And even if a trustee's fiduciary is limited to the lender, (again I say this is absurd) the borrower is an INTENDED beneficiary of the terms of the trust. Any party who wrongfully induces a trustee to violate his trust position is guilty of third party breach of fiduciary. And, again, it cannot be said that a trustee is performing his fiduciary - to anyone - when he institutes foreclose proceedings with no evidence of the instigator's authority. And therein lies another story - what documentation provides evidence of that authority to the trustee and what is / has been actually given to the 'trustee'? I suggest the equivalent of zero. If courts persist in denying homeowner's relief from wrongful foreclosure on the arguments currently being made, some savvy attorney is going to file suit based on breach of fiduciary and or third party breach of fiduciary, and that suit is going to be successful, and I for one can't wait.

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