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Rancho Cucamonga, Ca.  Couple Awarded $1 Million For Bad Credit Reporting  

With spotless credit, Reed and Mary Ann Fisher had always paid their mortgage on time, but a two-year nightmare began when Wells Fargo started to falsely report them as delinquent.

Even after the mortgage was transferred to Freddie Mac, the original lender did not clean up the credit report as they had told the couple, but rather went on reporting them to the credit agencies and even began foreclosure proceedings on the property to which they had no claim.


In the spring of 2001, the Fishers had their home in San Clemente, California red-tagged because of land instability.

They promptly contacted their mortgage servicer, Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, and obtained a forbearance agreement on their mortgage payments while their home was red-tagged.

Wells Fargo later transferred the mortgage to Freddie Mac, which charged off the loan with a zero balance and no negative credit marks.

The problems for the Fishers had only begun, though.

Although the company no longer serviced the loan, Wells Fargo continued to report to the credit bureaus that the Fishers were delinquent on their mortgage payments.

Eventually, Wells Fargo began foreclosure proceedings on the Fisher's home.

Although the problems with Wells Fargo proved a burden unto itself, the Fishers found that they had become financially paralyzed because of the damage to their credit scores from the negative entries.

While the Des Moines, Iowa-based mortgage unit sent letters to the couple stating that the credit information was being cleaned up, the company continued to report the negative credit information to the credit bureaus.

After two years of struggle, the Fishers filed a lawsuit against Wells Fargo to halt the credit reporting.

On March 6, a Rancho Cucamonga jury awarded the couple a judgment against Wells Fargo for $765,000 in actual and punitive damages.

In August, the court added $283,594.45 in fees and costs in compliance with the Fair Credit Reporting Act, which allows consumers to recover their attorney's fees and costs with a favourable verdict.

"The Fishers tried for two years to clean up their credit by themselves, only to have the door slammed in their faces repeatedly,” said their attorney Robert F. Brennan.

"So often in these cases, you see an attitude that big banks like Wells Fargo believe that a consumer's credit information belongs to the bank. It does not. If nothing else, I hope Wells Fargo learns from this verdict that a consumer's credit information belongs to the consumer, and a bank has a sacred trust to protect it from wrongful damage."

Wells Fargo maintains that their mortgage unit had been servicing the loan at the time when the negative report was filed.

An appeal filed by the company remains pending.

The total sum awarded to the Fishers after the two-year ordeal was $1,045,594.

"I know that there have been a handful of judgments over $1 million in California for false credit reporting, but probably not enough,” said Brennan.

“The credit reporting industry needs to get the message that false credit reporting can ruin a consumer's life and that extra precautions need to be taken to prevent false credit reporting, and to promptly fix it when it does occur."

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