Want to Fight Your Foreclosure and Win?
Written on December 16, 2009
Have you been served with a foreclosure?
Here are your options:
1) Your mortgage servicer’s loss mitigation department may provide you with a “reinstatement figure.” If you pay it, the servicer will reinstate the mortgage and dismiss the foreclosure. This option typically has a couple of problems associated with it. First of all, the servicer will not be very cooperative, even if it promises you that the reinstatement figure is on the way. Even if you successfully obtain a reinstatement figure, you still must come up with the cash to pay the amount due to stop the foreclosure.
(By the way, reinstatement figures often will include hundreds, if not thousands of dollars, in junk fees, such as a Broker Price Opinion, property inspections and other “property preservation expenses”. These fees are often charged to the borrower whether or not the cost was actually incurred or the service actually performed.)
2) You can seek a complete refinance of the existing mortgage in foreclosure. This option is limited to a very small group of people. There must be sufficient equity to entice another lender to pay off the defaulted mortgage. This becomes even more difficult if there is a second mortgage because that must also be paid off. Given the much publicized “credit crunch” on Wall Street, only those borrowers with substantial and verifiable income will most likely qualify.
3) You can place your home on the market and attempt to sell it. This may not be a realistic option because home values are still dropping each day, and you may now have no equity or negative equity. I have previously discussed the possibility of a short sale, but if you are in a foreclosure, you are under the additional pressure of time. There is only a small window of opportunity until closing on the sale of your home will become impossible before a foreclosure sale date, and your mortgage servicer will be in no hurry to cooperate. See option #1 above.
4) You can file a Chapter 13 reorganization bankruptcy. There are a bunch of excellent blogs on the subject of filing a Chapter 13 on Bankruptcy Law Network, but you can only save your home in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy if you can make the monthly Chapter 13 Plan payment. Chapter 13 can buy you time, but if your case is dismissed for nonpayment, the mortgage servicing company will resume the foreclosure. If you have regular income, this is the way to go.
5) You can give up and move out. This is an option that many people are choosing in this current economic climate. Maybe the reason you fell behind in your mortgage is a long term loss of income. You cannot meet the requirements of one of the four previous options, and you are ready to move on. There are two major problems with this option. The first problem is that you will definitely have a foreclosure on your credit report. Secondly, there is a possibility that the mortgage company will still be owed a balance after the foreclosure sale. This leads to a deficiency balance owed by you to the mortgage company.
6) You can fight against your foreclosure. It is not a given that your mortgage servicer will succeed easily in a foreclosure . . . unless you do nothing. This may sound too good to be true, but your mortgage company may have filed an improper foreclosure lawsuit. Across the country, judges are punishing mortgage companies for incomplete record keeping and for violations of law. You may have valuable defenses and counterclaims against your mortgage company that could actually prevent foreclosure and even require your mortgage servicing company to pay you damages. You may even be able to force your lender to completely rewrite the terms of your note and mortgage, enabling you to keep your home.
Here’s how you can fight your foreclosure!
How do I fight my Florida foreclosure?
http://www.mortgagelawnetwork.com
By Chip Parker, Jacksonville Consumer Attorney on Mar 28, 2008 in Attorneys In Our Network, barney frank, mortgage reform
greywolf.critter.netAs I stated in my previous article, you have a limited number of options when you are served with a foreclosure on your home. For many, the best option may be to fight the foreclosure. “How is this possible?,” you may ask. “How can I fight my huge mortgage company with all of its tall building lawyers?”
The truth of the matter is that, despite the millions of dollars spent by the mortgage servicing industry on sophisticated software to process loans, record keeping tends to be sloppy and full of errors. Moreover, the largest mortgage companies hire law firms that do nothing but file foreclosures, and the work goes to the firm that bids the cheapest price per case. It’s not that these lawyers are stupid. More accurately, their volume case load prevents them from effectively litigating contested cases, and their client, the mortgage servicer, does little to assist in the prosecution of the foreclosure case.
Are you aware that your mortgage company is probably not the same company that actually loaned you the money to buy or refinance your home? How do you know if this mortgage company has been properly assigned your note and mortgage? The alleged assignment may be legally insufficient. Does your foreclosure complaint even have copies of the note, mortgage and assignment attached? Most likely, these documents are not attached, and may not even be in the possession of your mortgage company. On October 31, 2007, a federal district judge in Ohio dismissed fourteen (14) foreclosure cases filed by Deutsche Bank for this very reason.
Your mortgage company may be attempting to substitute your original note and/or mortgage with a copy. This is called a “Count to Establish Lost Documents.” There are strict legal requirements to establish a lost note or mortgage, and your mortgage company may be unable to meet the requirements if challenged.
Your mortgage company may have inflated the balance due by charging junk fees, such as a Broker Price Opinion (BPO), property inspections, force placed insurance and other “property preservation expenses.” Additionally, your mortgage company may have placed your payments into a “suspense account” and charged you late fees as if payments were never made.
The bottom line is that your mortgage company may have filed an improper foreclosure lawsuit. You may have valuable defenses and counterclaims against your mortgage company that could actually prevent foreclosure and even require your mortgage servicing company to pay you damages. You may even be able to force your lender to completely rewrite the terms of your note and mortgage, enabling you to keep your home.
Don’t sit on your rights! You have or will be served a copy of the foreclosure complaint by a process server. You typically have only 20 days to respond to the mortgage company’s complaint, so you need to see an attorney immediately if you wish to defend against the foreclosure!
Keith Junor is a Licensed Realtor and Mortgage Broker in Florida with 17 years experience. He authors a Blog at www.The expertsinrealestate.com that gives timely advice on buying and selling, credit repair, mortgages and foreclosure. He can be reached at kj1010@bellsouth.net
Related posts:
- Mortgage Wars: How You Can Fight Fraud and Reverse Foreclosure
- Fight Foreclosure!: How to Cope with a Mortgage You Can’t Pay, Negotiate with Your Bank, and Save Your Home
- Fight Foreclosure!: How to Cope with a Mortgage You Can’t Pay, Negotiate with Your Bank, and Save Your Home
- Fight Foreclosure!: How to Cope with a Mortgage You Can’t Pay, Negotiate with Your Bank, and Save Your Home
- Fight Foreclosure!: How to Cope with a Mortgage You Can’t Pay, Negotiate with Your Bank, and Save Your Home
Filed in: Foreclosure Help.










