GUIDE 6 – Document Folder Checklist

Building your “core file”

This is for your own organization, not for filing as-is in court.

1. Physical or digital (or both)

Decide how you’ll store:

  • Physical folder or binder for paper copies
  • Digital folder on your computer or cloud (with backups)

Many homeowners do both: physical for court days and attorney meetings, digital for long-term storage.

2. Core categories

Create subfolders (physical or digital) for:

  1. Court Documents
    • Summons and complaint
    • Any motions filed (by you or them)
    • Court orders, decisions, or notices
    • Referee reports (if any)
  2. Service & Notice
    • Affidavits of service
    • Envelopes with postmarks (if you kept them)
    • Any letters where you first learned of the case
  3. Assignments & Ownership
    • Assignments of mortgage / deed of trust
    • Allonges to the note
    • “We sold your loan” or “new owner/servicer” letters
    • Any public-record printouts you’ve obtained
  4. Loan & Payment History
    • Original note / mortgage / deed of trust (if you have them)
    • Payment histories they’ve sent
    • Loan modification agreements
    • Forbearance or trial plan letters
  5. Communication & Behavior
    • Letters or emails from servicers/attorneys
    • Logs of phone calls (your notes)
    • Any inspection notices or “vacant/abandoned” letters
    • Complaint filings and responses (CFPB, AG, etc.)
  6. Personal Notes & Timelines
    • Your Timeline Worksheet (Guide 5)
    • Personal journal entries about key events
    • Any written questions you’ve prepared

3. Simple naming system (for digital)

Try a consistent naming convention:

  • YYYY-MM-DD – Type – Who – Short description

Examples:

  • 2018-06-01 – Court – Summons & Complaint – Bank ABC
  • 2021-10-15 – Assignment – Fannie to DLJ – Recorded
  • 2023-03-05 – Letter – Servicer XYZ – Acceleration Notice

This makes it much easier to search and sort later.

4. What if you don’t have everything?

Common gaps:

  • You never got some documents directly.
  • You misplaced older letters.
  • Prior attorneys kept files you don’t have.

Do what you can with:

  • What you do have now
  • What you can download from your court’s e-filing system
  • What you can request from servicers or prior counsel

The goal is not perfection. The goal is moving from scattered to centralized.


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