04/03/2026
Attorney Dion Convinces Massachusetts Superior Court To Deny Mortgage Servicer’s Motion For Summary Judgment Where Pre-Foreclosure Default Notice Failed To Adequately Specify The Amount Required To Cure Default.
Often times mortgage servicers commit errors in their required pre-foreclosure default notices by failing to “specify” the “amount required to cure the default” in strict compliance with the terms of the mortgage. This may be grounds to reverse a foreclosure under the standard of strict compliance for such default notices according to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. In the case of Rozmarin v. Shellpoint Mortgage Servicing Attorney Dion argued that a pre-foreclosure default notice failed to strictly comply with the requirement that the notice “specify” the “action required to cure the default” where the breakdown of the past-due amount specified differed from the amount demanded by approximately 23k. In denying Shellpoint motion for summary judgment the Worcester Superior Court agreed. As a post-foreclosure case, the outcome of the Rozmarin decision based on Attorney Dion’s theory may pave the way for new foreclosure challenges for both pre and post foreclosure situations. If you are currently behind on your mortgage or have already been foreclosed on you may be entitled to relief ranging from money damages to a rescission of your foreclosure based on this surprisingly common error.