Call it a foreclosure factory. But the assembly line consists of paper and computers, not pieces and parts.
More than one in four mortgage foreclosures in Minnesota begins its journey from an unassuming suite in a two-story office building in Woodbury.
Behind the plain pane-glass door of the law firm of Wilford & Geske, about 5,300 mortgages a year -- an average of more than 20 each workday -- are processed and placed on the path to a sheriff's sale or, less likely, a successful workout between the lender and the mortgage holder.
Wilford & Geske is a small law firm but a huge player in the state's $10 million to $13 million mortgage foreclosure industry. With 26 percent of the Minnesota foreclosure market, the Wilford firm processes more cases than any other firm in the state.
Indeed, a handful of law firms that specialize in debt collection do the bulk of foreclosures in Minnesota. St. Louis Park's Usset, Weingarden and Liebo is No. 2, handling about 20 percent of the 20,404 foreclosures in the state last year.
And despite reputations of law firms drowning in profit, processing foreclosures is not necessarily financially lucrative. But with enough business, a firm can develop economies of scale and streamline the filing and notification process.
Paul Weingarden, a senior partner in the firm that bears his name, said he makes as little as $50 on some cases after expenses.
"But we make up for it with volume," he said. "It's a systems process. As long as you keep everything on the conveyor belt, the system is fine. Once something falls off the conveyor belt, we lose money."