Wells Fargo sued on claims it wrongfully litigated California man to death
Larry Delassus’ heart stopped on December 19, 2012 during a court hearing against Wells Fargo, the bank that had for two years demanded he pay more than ten thousand dollars of his neighbor’s late property taxes and is now being sued for wrongful death.
The retired 62-year-old US Navy veteran had been battling Wells
Fargo for two years, following a mistake by the bank which held him
liable for property taxes actually owed by a neighbor – $13,361
which the bank paid in order to keep that property’s mortgage
afloat.
Unfortunately for Delassus, described as a quiet man who
suffered from a rare and debilitating blood clot disorder known as
Budd-Chiari syndrome, the simple typo that caused Wells Fargo to
misidentify him for his neighbor seemed to be an error that the
fourth-largest bank in the United States simply would not
rectify.
According to an investigation conducted by LA Weekly, even after
admitting that a mis-entered number had dragged Delassus into the
ordeal, the bank eventually foreclosed upon and sold his
condominium apartment. This was after increasing his mortgage
payments from $1,237.69 to $2,429.13 in order to recover the
$13,361 in taxes he never owed.
Delassus, a retiree living on a limited budget, couldn’t meet
the increased mortgage bill, and once he stopped paying became
delinquent. Following the foreclosure on his home, he had to move
to a small apartment in an assisted-living home.
In January 2009 Delassus was first informed that he owed tens of
thousands in property taxes. After consulting with Anthony
Trujillo, his attorney and next-door neighbor, Trujillo confirmed
that he was actually six months ahead on those taxes, paid directly
to Los Angeles County. By March 2009 the bank had doubled his
mortgage payment, and by December of that year the bank was ready
to foreclose.
It was not until May 2010 that Trujillo discovered that in the
fine print the initial letter sent to Delassus had his property
parcel number off by two digits, and that he had been mistaken for
a neighbor.
In court documents later, LA Weekly reports that Wells Fargo
attorney Robert Bailey of Anglin Flewelling Rasmussen Campbell
& Trytten LLP admitted the bank’s original error: “Wells Fargo paid the amount it determined
was owed to the County Assessor: approximately $10,500. This was a
mistake. The $10,500 was the tax amount owed on a neighboring
property, not Plaintiff’s.”
Despite admitting to that mistake, the bank would not allow
Delassus to pay his original mortgage payment, and demanded the
past due amount plus fees called “reinstatement.” During a phone
conversation recorded by Trujillo, bank representatives were unable
to tell Delassus what the total amount due was, and eventually
simply hung up.
Six days after that phone call attempt, on January 25, 2011,
Delassus finally heard back from Wells Fargo, which wanted a total
sum of $337,250.40 – and required payment the very next day.
Delassus instead decided to sue Wells Fargo with Trujillo’s help
for negligence and discrimination against a disabled person. It was
during a hearing for that case in December 2012 that he died in
court.
Following his death, a close friend of Delassus, Debbie
Popovich, along with Trujillo, filed a wrongful death claim in
April. According to Courthouse News Service, Popovich seeks
restitution, costs, civil penalties and punitive damages on behalf
of his estate.
In a scathing legal complaint filed by the two, Wells Fargo is
accused of nothing less than litigating Delassus to
death.
“At the very end, with his
home being sold by the Bank and resold by the purchaser within
months for nearly twice what he paid, Larry Delassus, now living in
a boarding home, was still fighting for what he and many Americans
believe is right by going to court. Wells Fargo, with its virtually
unlimited resources, filed a series of procedural motions in its
defense, needlessly forcing an ailing Larry to appear in court.
Delassus valiantly continued to fight the best he could until his
body gave up,” reads the complaint.
This article originally appeared on : RT
Source: http://rinf.com/alt-news/breaking-news/wells-fargo-sued-on-claims-it-wrongfully-litigated-california-man-to-death/33565/
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