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Appeal to Save Nineteenth Century Club Withdrawn

Nineteenth Century Club

  • Nineteenth Century Club

Standing on the sidewalk outside the crumbling and boarded-up Nineteenth Century Club, attorneys Steve Mulroy and Webb Brewer announced that the plaintiff in an appeal to save the stately historic home at 1433 Union has decided to withdraw. That means the building’s owners, the Lin family, may go forward with any plans they have for the property.

“We continue to believe we had a strong case legally, but without a buyer to purchase and preserve the property, any legal victory would be a hollow victory,” Mulroy said.

The plaintiff in the case is a former member of the Nineteenth Century Club who believes the club’s vote to auction the property violated its bylaws because the entire membership wasn’t notified about the planned sale. The property was sold at auction after a vote was held by some members of the Nineteenth Century Club. The club’s president Lynn Heathcott donated the money from the sale to the Children’s Museum of Memphis. Heathcott has contended that the club could not afford the repairs on the property, which was in violation of Memphis Fire Department code, leaving no other option than to sell it at auction.

Chancery Court Judge Walter Evans declared the sale of the property had been properly conducted, but the plaintiff appealed. Memphis Heritage had been helping promote public awareness around the plight of the building, which they believe the Lins intend to demolish to make way for a strip mall with a Chinese restaurant. The Lins currently own New Hunan Restaurant on Park, Kublai Khan Crazy Mongolian Stir Fry on Airways, and Red Fish Sushi Asian Bistro in Lakeland. The Nineteenth Century Club is one of the few historic properties left on shopping center-heavy Union Avenue.

When the plaintiff appealed, there were two potential buyers who had offered to purchase the property from the Lins. One was from Nashville, and the other was from California. But both deals have since fallen through. Memphis Heritage members had raised $100,000 to pay a bond for the appeal.

“We didn’t want to put our donor money at risk when there wasn’t a clear-cut idea for a buyer,” said Memphis Heritage president Joey Hagen.

Mulroy said the $100,000 would be distributed back to the Memphis Heritage donors.

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Opinion

Memphis Makes Peace with Wells Fargo on Mortgages

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Can something good come out of the biggest real estate collapse and mortgage fiasco in Memphis history?

Mayor A C Wharton hopes so. On Wednesday, Wharton along with Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell and Wells Fargo officials held a news conference to talk about “our relationship” and the settlement of a lawsuit over people who had “unpleasant experiences” with home loans. The harmony was in stark contrast to the nasty lawsuit alleging that Wells Fargo made deceptive loans to poor people that caused a foreclosure crisis and depleted city coffers. The lawsuit became a touchstone for media reports about subprime mortgages and poverty in Memphis at a time when the city is losing residents to the suburbs and trying to improve its image.

In the agreement, described as a “term sheet” with details yet to be completed, Wells Fargo gives $7.5 million to Memphis and Shelby County to assist low-income borrowers who want to buy or fix up homes. Some of that will go to financial education (“Hands-On Banking” Wells Fargo calls it) for students as young as middle school as well as adult would-be homebuyers. A total of $4.5 million is marked for grants of up to $15,000 for renovation assistance. The homes do not have to be financed by Wells Fargo. Luttrell said “the lion’s share” of the money will go to Memphis.

“This is a good and sound starting point,” Wharton said. “Quite frankly, if you look at the age at which most lawsuits come to an end, this one was filed in 2010, and now its may 2012, to bring about this kind of relief, that’s a baby walking in two months.”

Wharton said he was mainly concerned about putting money in the hands of consumers now as opposed to what they might get six or seven years down the road.

“Lawsuits tend to go on and on,” he said. “When you see an opportunity to get some money on the table, sometimes it’s best to take that opportunity.”

Wells Fargo was represented by Leigh Collier, regional president for the Mid-South.

“What a win-win for the citizens of Memphis and Shelby County,” she said. She touted the benefits of “financial literacy” and said “we are thrilled to come to an agreement with the city and the county.”

Wells Fargo has set a goal of making $425 million in loans to local borrowers in the next five years, with $125 million of that targeted for low-income and middle-income buyers. Collier said the amount is “based on historical data we don’t publish” when asked how it compares to the amount that Wells Fargo loaned in the five years preceding the housing collapse and the amount it would probably have loaned in Memphis and Shelby County over the next five years without this agreement.

The loans will be market rate, currently under 5 percent, rather than the sub-prime loans with confusing details and higher rates that got so many borrowers in trouble, Collier said.

Memphis City Councilman Harold Collins, whose Whitehaven district was the focus of a story in The New York Times in 2010 about blacks losing decades of economic gains because of foreclosures, was not impressed with the agreement.

“Typical of most settlements like that,” he wrote in an email. “They place some crazy restrictions on people that might apply. You have to go to some training from a non profit? They know most people will NOT do that stuff and thereby Wells Fargo will not have to forgo the money. Question: Did Wells Fargo impose these kinds of challenges on these people BEFORE they approved their loans? What about doing these BEFORE they were foreclosed?”

One question is whether anyone will want to buy a blighted house in a declining neighborhood under any terms. Wharton said that with the assistance of community development corporations, he thinks there will be a market.

“Some of these neighborhoods are remarkably stable, and with the idea that I am not gong to be the only one trying to renovate a house, that is what’s going to bring them in,” he said.

City Attorney Herman Morris, who grew up in the Binghampton neighborhood in Memphis, said the deal will help stabilize neighborhoods by promoting ownership over renting.

“I think folks would rather live in homes that they own if they can,” he said.

Webb Brewer, the former head of Memphis Legal Services now working as a private attorney with the city and county on the housing issue, said “We were in for a long haul had we continued on with the litigation. It would have been a long, grueling, expensive fight for everyone. You don’t know what you would get down the road.”

Brewer said the important parts are the $7.5 million in “hard money” and the commitment to make $125 million in standard loans in low and moderate-income areas once targeted for sub-prime loans.

He agreed that the issue of fraudulent loans remains unresolved.

“Education does not address cases where pretty sophisticated borrowers were deceived. I am an attorney who practices in that area and sometimes I wold look at a loan and say, ‘hey, what does that mean?’ Education doesn’t fix that, but a lot of that lending has gone by the wayside anyway with the change in the market.”

If nothing else, the settlement lets Memphis move on with a best-foot-forward campaign that was going to be difficult enough without the worst-foot-forward campaign in the lawsuit against Wells Fargo.

Categories
Opinion

Weekend Report: Barbecue Makeover, Big East, Big Bluff

Best line of the week: “It was a bluff they hoped would be called,” by Jackson Baker, on the annexation moves and counter-moves by Sen. Mark Norris and the Memphis City Council.

A picture worth a thousand words: Memphis Tigers in Times Square, as noted by my colleague Frank Murtaugh, who got this comment from Big East associate commissioner John Paquette on how it happened: “This is a terrific benefit of a deal we have with American Eagle Outfitters. The sign is at their Times Square store. AEG is the presenting sponsor of our men’s and women’s basketball tournaments. They also sponsor our academic awards. We also are able to use it for acknowledging conference champions after we conduct one of our championships. We welcomed our other new members in a similar way.”

The Food Network is coming to Memphis next week to Pollards Bar-B-Q in Whitehaven. Robert Irvine, the muscular take-charge host of “Restaurant: Impossible” will bring in his crew to do a makeover of the restaurant at 4560 Elvis Presley Boulevard, about a mile south of Graceland. The gimmick is that the crew spends $10,000 on design and Irvine whips the staff into shape. I had lunch there Friday with Memphis City Councilman Harold Collins, who represents Whitehaven. “No worse than an 8” on a scale of 1 to 10, was our evaluation of the food and the premises. Our sandwiches were so so big we had to eat them with a fork, the meat was lean, the fries crisp, the beans not bad, the vinyl booths clean. There were only a couple of other customers, however, and the orange/mustard colored cinder block interior decor needs work, but this one looks like a lay down for Irvine and company. Tenesia Pollard, who was at the counter, said the show contacted her two days after she contacted them. Filming is next week, with the show scheduled to air in May.

It’s always something at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium. With the Big East news came the predictable cry for public funds to fix the turf, press box (cry me a river), big-screen, and they’ll think of something else. If there was ever a case for user fees, this is it. College football is a big-bucks goldmine, even for lower tier bowls, as I have reported. Let them pay to play. And put on a ticket surcharge. Attendance can’t get much worse than it has been for the last two or three years, so there is huge upside when Memphis joins the Big East and upgrades its schedule in 2013. As for the media, give ’em a Pollards barbecue sandwich and a free beer. Works for me.

The Racquet Club is installing the Hawk-Eye System for the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships February 17-26. The system lets players challenge calls and fans see how close the ball was to the line. Tournament Director Peter Lebedevs said it will be used on all main-draw matches on the Stadium Court.

Attorney Webb Brewer said the mortgage settlement between 49 states and big lenders does not put an end to the city of Memphis lawsuit against Wells Fargo. tn incl. “It is not identical to the issues in our lawsuit,” he said. “Ours had more to do with the making of the loans and discrimination targeting minorities for bad loans, which resulted in foreclosures.” The federal lawsuit, he said, survived a motion to dismiss and is in the discovery phase.