T1 In this mortgage foreclosure proceeding, Defendants/Appellants James F. Moody and Susan L. Moody ("Owners") seek review of an order granting summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff/Appellee Bank of America, N.A. ("Bank"). On appeal, Owners claim there was a genuine issue of material fact concerning Bank's standing to sue on the promissory note ("Note"). Additionally, Owners claim there was a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the Petition was filed in good faith because Owners' request for loan modification was pending. Upon review of the record and applicable law, we affirm.
12 Bank filed its Petition on July 26, 2012, alleging Owners had defaulted on the Note beginning September 1, 2011. The Note, attached to the Petition as Exhibit A, is signed by James F. Moody and promises to pay BSM Financial, L.P. $72,724.00. Page three of the exhibit contains two indorse-ments: the first is a special indorsement from BSM Financial to Taylor, Bean, and Whitaker Mortgage Corp. The second is an undated, blank indorsement from Taylor, Bean, and Whitaker.
T3 On January 31, 20183, Bank filed a Motion for Summary Judgment. Owners filed a response, claiming Bank had not shown it was entitled to enforce the Note before the Petition was filed, as required by Deutsche Bank National Trust v. Brumbaugh,
'I 4 We review an appeal on summary judgment de novo. J.P. Morgan Chase Bank Nat. Ass'n v. Eldridge,
15 "To commence a foreclosure action in Oklahoma, a plaintiff must demonstrate it has a right to enforce the note and, absent a showing of ownership, the plaintiff lacks standing." Eldridge,
T6 On appeal, Owners raise several issues concerning Bank's status as holder of the Note. Owners claim Bank failed to prove: %) the blank indorsement from Taylor, Bean, and Whitaker occurred pre-filing; (M) the indorsement from Taylor, Bean, and Whitaker was made by someone authorized to do
T7 This case is similar to Brumbaugh, with one key factual difference. In Brum-baugh, the note attached to plaintiff's petition contained no indorsements whatsoever. Brumbaugh,
18 Owners also claim there was a genuine issue of material fact concerning Bank's failure to comply with HAMP and consent judgment service standards. HAMP is a federal loan modification program provided for under the scope of the Troubled Asset Relief Program. See 12 U.S.C. § 5211; see also Eldridge,
T9 Owners cite no binding authority for their assertion that a mortgage servicer's failure to comply with HAMP or the servicing standards is an affirmative defense to foreclosure. No case in Oklahoma has held as such. The vast majority of courts have rejected arguments that a borrower has a direct cause of action under HAMP, that a borrower has due process rights under HAMP, or that a borrower can maintain a breach of contract action under a third-party beneficiary theory. See Miller v. Chase Home Fin., LLC,
1 10 There was no genuine issue of material fact concerning Bank's standing to enforce the Note, nor did Owners raise a valid affirmative defense to foreclosure. Accordingly, the trial court's order sustaining Bank's Motion for Summary Judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Owner also attacks the validity of an affidavit from a Bank officer attached to Bank's Motion for Summary Judgment. Because Bank proved it was in possession of the Note at the time of filing by attaching it to the Petition, the affidavit was not needed. Therefore, we do not address Owners' propositions of error concerning the affidavit.
