Massachusetts bankruptcy courts have invalidated mortgages containing defects, including the failure of lenders to observe strict formalities in the execution of mortgage acknowledgements. See our prior post on this very topic at Lender Beware: The Tragic Consequences of Defective Mortgage Acknowledgements.
Lenders of troubled mortgages upon Massachusetts real property should carefully review their mortgages to avoid potential invalidation of such mortgages in bankruptcy. Bankruptcy courts in Massachusetts have led the charge in avoiding mortgages containing defects in notary clauses.
Massachusetts law requires that a validly executed acknowledgement be attached to a mortgage as a prerequisite to recording the mortgage in the registry of deeds.
As of December 1, 2015, many of the Official Forms for use in Bankruptcy Courts were updated. The changes were made as part of a forms modernization effort. Among the forms updated was the Official Proof of Claim Form (formerly Form B 10) used to assert a creditor’s claim in a bankruptcy case. The new Proof of Claim Form (Form 410) is particularly worth noting.