The
party's over at Kirkland mortgage company
Former Washington Huskies football player Scott Greenlaw
led the mortgage company he founded to dizzying heights
-- 400 employees, a sprawling new headquarters and kegs
of beer at staff meetings. Now he's selling his house to
avoid bankruptcy as creditors line up with lawsuits.
Merit Financial was barely shut this spring before founder
Scott Greenlaw and his top executives opened new mortgage
businesses.
But vowing to put the past behind them has turned out to
be not so easy. The sudden demise in May of one of Washington's
largest mortgage brokerages has left a trail of angry ex-employees,
expensive lawsuits, unpaid taxes and government investigations.
"I'm not walking out of here penniless; I'm walking
out of here with a huge debt load," Greenlaw, 34, confided
days before he relinquished Merit Financial's sprawling
Kirkland headquarters to its former owner rather than losing
the building through foreclosure.
Now, the man whose business was built on financing homes
for others may be forced to sell his own. Greenlaw is trying
to avoid bankruptcy by selling his $4 million waterfront
home to pay his debts.
It seems a quick turn of events for a former college football
star who'd cobbled together $225,000 to start a company
in 2001 that grew to more than 400 employees. Merit claimed
to write more than $2 billion in loans and Greenlaw basked
in its glow as it made him a millionaire publicity magnet.
Now all of that is gone. However, pointed questions about
his lack of leadership and poor judgment, including his
buying kegs of beer for business meetings, remain.
Some wonder if the company's demise hinged on its practice
of hiring jocks and stunning but inexperienced young loan
officers and managing them loosely. Still others questioned
whether Greenlaw's litigious and financially draining divorce
and his romance with another woman distracted him.
Ambition meets opportunity
The story of Greenlaw's rise and fall starts, as many do,
on a high note.
The Issaquah native was a cornerback for the Washington
Huskies from 1992 to 1995, playing in the 1993 Rose Bowl.
With a UW business degree in hand and days in Lambda Chi
Alpha fraternity behind him, he entered the mortgage business
in 1998. He opened Merit three years later. With interest
rates falling to 30-year lows, the timing was excellent.
"We had all these leads coming in," Greenlaw
recalled. "So we hired more loan officers. I hired
a lot of like-minded individuals -- Washington State, UW
graduates who'd been in fraternities and played sports.
We formed a strong brotherhood."
By early 2004, Merit was such a powerhouse that Greenlaw
spent $13.5 million to buy a headquarters, complete with
a gym and a waterfall, in a Kirkland office park. In the
lobby, a photo mural captured the company's spirit. On one
side, under the caption "That was then," was a
dowdy couple in a stiff dance embrace. On the other, under
the words "This is Merit," were a scantily clad
dancer and her partner bending in a sensual tango move.
A self-confident blond with a dazzling smile, Greenlaw
would arrive at work wearing pinstripes and a Rolex. When
the Puget Sound Business Journal recognized Greenlaw as
an up-and-coming businessman, he told the paper his favorite
film was "Wall Street." The movie contained the
famous line, "Greed ... is good." "Maverick"
and "motivator"were the words he used to describe
himself.
Greenlaw was one of many mortgage-business newcomers who
saw gold in doing refinances. His target clients: tarnished
borrowers whose credit problems qualified them only for
expensive -- and highly profitable -- subprime loans.
Merit enticed them with mass mailings announcing "Interest
Rate Reduction Notification" from the "Department
of Loan Reprocessing" in big print and Merit only as
a tiny footnote. Mailings also bore an official-looking
eagle emblem that smacked of a government mailing.
Such tactics constitute deceptive and misleading trade
practices, according to a Washington State Department of
Financial Institutions. But Merit was never penalized.
Merit also hired telemarketers to cold-call homeowners,
sometimes repeatedly reaching people on the national Do
Not Call Registry. That drew the wrath of Oregon's attorney
general, who fined Merit $3,000.
With Merit's business skyrocketing, Greenlaw decided to
delegate the day-to-day operations. He chose his close buddy,
Anthony J. "Tony" Nelson, for the No. 2 position,
chief operating officer.
A Central Washington University dropout, Nelson was an
employment recruiter and salesman with no mortgage or management
experience.
Where Greenlaw appeared to be liked by his employees, Nelson
had a reputation for rudeness, accosting new employees with
a blunt: "Do you know who I am?"
"He'd get mad if they didn't," recalled former
loan officer Nick Barry.
"He was very arrogant," added a former company
executive, who, like others, wouldn't be quoted by name
because he said he's afraid of Nelson. "No one understood
what he did. The only sense I had was he was the best friend
of the owner, and he was collecting a hefty paycheck."
Nelson repeatedly declined to comment.
The fast money lure
While Nelson ran daily loan operations, Greenlaw concentrated
on building a stellar firm -- one that brought recognition
in 2004 from Washington CEO magazine. The magazine named
Merit one of the best firms in the state to work for, alongside
Starbucks and Costco. The following year the Business Journal
named Merit a finalist for its Eastside Business of the
Year award.
The problem with much of mortgage lending, Greenlaw told
the Business Journal, was that loan officers lacked sufficient
training and accountability.
"You could be selling shoes yesterday and making loans
tomorrow," he said in a 2004 interview. "Ninety
percent of our population has the majority of their money
in their home, yet we have people out there who are uneducated,
who do not have a lot of experience in the business, who
are not being managed correctly."
Some loan officers, including Kerrie Saulness, came to
Merit with years of loan experience. However, many had none
and got their jobs by word of mouth along the Eastside club
scene's grapevine.
The lure was fast money. Recent high-school graduates with
scant work experience but a flair for phone sales could
earn $100,000 or more a year in commissions.
Conversely, those with lesser sales ability could work
for weeks and earn nothing -- in violation of federal and
state labor laws. Nonetheless, Greenlaw defended Merit's
pay structure as the industry standard. Turnover was high.
Washington state does not require mortgage loan officers
to have training or be licensed; that will change Jan. 1.
Merit did put loan officers through a 19-step program.
"Loan Officer 101" was 15 minutes long, as was
"Mortgage Glossary." Thirty minutes were devoted
to "10 Step Loan Flow."
Saulness wasn't impressed. She sat next to two 18-year-old
loan officers.
"They didn't even know how to read a credit report,"
she said.
Barry said wryly that many "had no idea what product
they were selling, but they knew how much money they could
make."
Merit employees proudly posted their resumes, plus photos
of their luxury cars and drinking parties, on various Web
sites. One loan officer had come to work fresh from being
a Hooters Girl. Another solicited clients for two endeavors:
writing mortgages for Merit and selling marijuana paraphernalia
on the side.
Indeed, several Merit loan officers boasted online that
doing drugs was a favorite pastime.
"Let's get hopped up and make some bad decisions,"
wrote one beside a photo of himself grinning broadly.
Numerous former employees, including loan officer Sunny
Hoppe, described working at Merit as a raucous -- sometimes
lewd -- frat party.
It was "young, hip, drugs and drinking," Hoppe
said, and that was at work. Former employees also said Merit
regularly provided a keg of beer for some staff meetings,
but Greenlaw said that, no, it was actually two kegs, and
employees were free to bring in six-packs on Fridays.
Asked about rumors of drug use in the office, Greenlaw
said, "We just never checked."
Still, Greenlaw dismissed partying as an issue and initially
said Merit's demise boiled down to a simple scenario: Its
business was built on mortgage refinances.
When interest rates rose and the lucrative refinance business
slowed significantly, Greenlaw gambled that he could increase
revenue by adding loan officers who could complete more
complex loans. That didn't work, and the overhead sank him,
he said.
Was it really that simple? Pressed, Greenlaw admitted it
wasn't.
"Buybacks were high," Greenlaw said, without
giving details.
In other words, Merit's loan officers executed mortgages
that were so flawed that the investors who bought the loans
from Merit forced them to buy them back.
A longtime broker not affiliated with Merit said such buybacks
are "extremely rare."
"It will bankrupt most mortgage brokers because most
don't have the resources to pay off a loan that is purchased
by a lender and bounces back," the broker said.
Complaints pour in
The 42 complaints received by state agencies and the Better
Business Bureau give insight into Merit's problems. Addressed
individually, none was serious enough to shut the company
down.
In one, the state ordered Merit to refund a borrower's
fees -- $11,422 -- after finding that the company had violated
nine federal and state laws and processed the loan without
getting the borrower's signatures on required forms.
Merit also drew complaints that it charged excessive fees,
failed to provide federally required loan documents, failed
to disclose fees and terms, harassed customers and repeatedly
forged documents.
One complaint came from Lynnzel Hernandez Valdez-Nabua.
A first-time homebuyer from Everett, she complained that
Merit forged her sister's signature, originally provided
as a reference, to say it was her employer's.
The company that bought Valdez-Nabua's loan from Merit
apparently discovered the forgery when it contacted her
employer for verification. She was fired because she could
not conclusively prove she didn't commit the deed.
Valdez-Nabua said she called Merit repeatedly to complain
and got no response.
Shown a stack of customer complaints, Greenlaw said he
didn't know about them. However, he stressed that shady
or illegal practices were not condoned.
Loan officer Hoppe said she had a different experience.
Ordered to complete a loan for an elderly homeowner who
was incapable of understanding it, she said she refused.
"Merit's whole attitude was, 'Get the deal,' "
Hoppe said.
Saulness said she also tangled with her boss.
"It was highly promoted that you overcharged the customer
because they're subprime and they deserve it," Saulness
said.
Meanwhile, Greenlaw's divorce appeared to distract him,
several insiders said.
He and his first wife, Lisa, wed in 1996. Their first home
purchase was a $90,900 Bellevue condominium.
By 2004, when they divorced, the couple owned Merit Financial,
a fledgling development company, part of an escrow company,
two waterfront houses, artwork, a boat, a BMW and a Porsche.
According to court documents, Scott Greenlaw had ample
income to support this lifestyle: some $1.8 million in 2005.
Lisa Greenlaw agreed to sign over her interest in the couple's
Kirkland home on Lake Washington. Scott gave her a promissory
note for $1 million. As long as he paid her $100,000 every
six months for five years, the note carried no interest.
Greenlaw missed the first two payments. Taken to court,
he argued that he shouldn't have to honor the agreement
because he hadn't understood it when he signed it.
But the real crunch was this: Greenlaw was in love and
wanted to remodel his Lake Washington property for his new
wife, Debbie Sumstad, whom he'd made co-chairwoman of his
new Merit Foundation to aid children.
Lenders were unwilling to loan him the $2.35 million he
needed as long as the $1 million obligation to his ex-wife
hung over his head. He wanted out of it.
Merit's slide revealed
After intensive legal maneuvering, the former couple turned
to binding arbitration. Arbitrator J. Kathleen Learned's
written report, filed with the court, revealed factors that
may have exacerbated Merit's slide.
According to the report, corporate officers asserted that
Greenlaw "was behaving financially irrationally and
taking money out of the companies against their advice."
There were also reports of his "lavish spending"
-- his new home's media room, for example, cost a reported
$300,000 -- and "acting rashly under the influence
of alcohol."
Learned said she couldn't attest to the truth of these
claims, but she was concerned. So the binding settlement
agreement carried serious stipulations. Scott Greenlaw must
pay his ex-wife the $1 million, and he could receive no
more than $30,000 a month in gross income from Merit.
Most tellingly, this past January, the agreement forced
him to turn over control of Merit's financial and management
decisions to his executive team.
Two members of that team, Justin Andrews and Brady Yeager,
said Greenlaw didn't do that, and he was at Merit's helm
when it imploded in May.
The state Department of Revenue soon slapped Merit Financial
with a lien for $351,294 in unpaid business and occupation
tax and froze its accounts. That meant there was no money
to pay the 300 or so employees thrown out of work in one
of the largest wage defaults in recent state history.
Investigations into worker pay were launched by the state
Department of Labor and Industries and the federal Department
of Labor. Neither will comment pending the outcomes.
All summer long creditors filed lawsuits against Greenlaw
and Merit. Wells Fargo Bank sued for $249,033. First American
Credco, which provided mortgage customers' credit reports,
sued for $228,249.
A limousine service sued to recover $31,210, and another
service provider, Lava Concepts, sued for $12,594, alleging
in court documents that Greenlaw "engaged in self dealing,
overpaying himself and looting the company coffers."
"As a direct result of his actions, Merit is unable
to fulfill its promises," Lava Concepts said in its
lawsuit.
Employees seek back pay
Meanwhile, an angry Saulness, denied her last month's pay,
organized an effort to launch a class-action lawsuit to
recover employees' lost wages. Initially, Seattle attorney
Marianne Meeker, of Blair & Meeker, was eager to proceed,
and final paychecks weren't her only target.
Meeker was confident that Merit wrongly denied some employees
minimum wage and overtime pay. She also said the firm owes
loan officers possibly hundreds of thousands it deducted
from their paychecks to pay state business and occupation
tax -- the tax the state said was in arrears. Merit, not
its employees, was responsible for that tax, Meeker said.
After several months of inquiry, Meeker has decided, at
least temporarily, against a class-action lawsuit because
there may be no money to recover.
Saulness understands, but she's furious.
"It's amazing this man can do this, and nothing happens
to him," she fumed.
Within days of shutting its doors, Merit's execs were in
the home-loan business again.
Nelson, Andrews and Yeager broke with Greenlaw to form
Elite Real Estate Group in Kirkland.
Scott Greenlaw went into business with a couple of Merit
buddies, but soon left that to work on his own.
"Merit was great fun for five years, but now it's
time to move on and give it another shot," Greenlaw
said. "I'm looking forward to the challenge of coming
back and proving to people who Scott Greenlaw really is."