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Mortgage & Refinancing

Published December 20, 2017

The importance of title insurance to protect your investment property

gh211A home is actually the biggest investment most of us will ever make. Once you buy a home, you will probably purchase some insurance plan to protect your property. Homeowner’s insurance prevents against loss from theft, fire, or wind and water damage. Flood insurance shields against water damage. And a different coverage called title insurance that can protect against unknown title risks which may endanger your financial investment on your property.

Title insurance is not as well known as other forms of property insurance, it is really important. The truth is, when buying a home, rather than buying the land or building, you are also buying the title to the investment property – the right to reside in and use the living space. That title might be restricted by claims and rights stated by others, which can reduce your use and possession of the property or possibly lead to financial loss. Title insurance deals with such title hazards.

It offers protection to the investment property by protecting unexpected issues. It is an end result of an investigation, search and clearing of your title, to make sure that the property investment is not at risk. An experienced title service will not just help find out the faults, but will also give the best solution for it.

Other forms of insurance that protect your property from future loss will charge a yearly premium. However, title insurance prevents against loss from risks and faults that currently exist in the title and will be charged on a one-time premium.

Also most banking institutions need mortgagee title insurance as assurance for their investment in property, just like they might require fire insurance along with other types of coverage as protection. When title insurance is included, lenders are ready to send mortgage money obtainable in distant locales in which they know little bit of the real estate market.

Determined by local procedures and state law in which the investment property is situated, you can purchase an extra premium for an owner’s policy otherwise you can pay a concurrent issue charge – typically a lesser amount – for the standalone lender coverage. You may also split settlement fees with the seller for the lender or even owner’s insurance policy.

A significant part of title service is its focus on risk prevention before insuring, Thus giving you the most beneficial opportunity for staying away from title claim. Title insuring starts with an investigation of public records which affects the property concerned. An checking is performed by the title service or attorney in support of its underwriter to ascertain whether the property is insurable. The checking of evidence from a search is meant to report “material objections” to the title. Commonly, important papers that don’t perfectly transfer title are found in history which is collected from the search.Through the search along with the checking, title issues are revealed in order to be corrected. This is the reason why we need title insurance that can protect our investment property from title loss and claims.

Published November 27, 2017

Don’t worry about the mortgage blacklist

vgy33Theoretically the mortgage blacklist contains details of people who have been repossessed. It’s supposed to be maintained by the Council of Mortgage Lenders. They say that it’s held by the two main credit reference agencies and that you have to ask the lender who repossessed you which agency it records its repossession information with. But when we asked different lenders on behalf of people who had been repossessed the lenders told us they didn’t know who they deposited this information with. And that they only deposit this information in certain cases. But they wouldn’t tell us which cases. We checked the two main credit reference agencies for some repossessed people and found no signs of repossession details. It’s very fishy. We’re investigating the blacklist further; we have suspicions about how it actually works but we’ll post more when we have more evidence.

By the way, the Council of Mortgage Lenders and the credit reference agencies are very concerned about people calling it a blacklist. They say it isn’t a blacklist, just a record of repossession information. We say: it’s a blacklist.

The credit reference agencies say lenders record repossession information that includes:

  • the repossession address
  • the address from which the mortgage application was made
  • the address that the repossessee has moved to.

Note that the credit reference agencies are also members of GAIN – the Gone Away Information Network – which lists debtors who move address without giving a forwarding address. We’ve found no signs of any repossessees actually being listed by GAIN members but we don’t have access to the whole list. Again, we have our suspicions about how the list actually works and will post more evidence when we have more information. In the meantime, you can see the Council of Mortgage Lenders’ information about the repossession blacklist at http://www.cml.org.uk/faqs/posreg.htm

If your lender applies to the court for a possession order and the court grants it, then this will be recorded by the Register of County Court judgements. This is separate to the Council of Mortgage Lenders’ possession register (though there are close links between the Register of County Court Judgements, which is actually a credit industry-owned company, and mortgage lenders). If you hand in the keys to the property – a voluntary repossession – then lenders do not usually apply to the court for a possession order. This is why – we think – many repossessees do not face a money judgement order and can find no trace of their repossession on their credit reference. We think the credit reference agencies do still hold information about the repossession but that you have to serve a full SARN notice on them to see it. We’d like more feedback on this.

 

Published November 27, 2017

What to do if you receive a Statutory Demand

As briefly and simply as we can explain it: both Abbey National and Nationwide have started threatening – and using – Statutory Demands to bludgeon repossesses into paying shortfall demands.

Carol Riley’s National Association of Mortgage Victims, working with Mary Ward Legal Centre’s Ahmad Butt, has done a great job of having two of Nationwide’s thrown out of court. We don’t yet know if anyone has beaten off any of Grabbey National’s.

Here’s how they work – and how to beat them.

Grabbey or Nationwide send a letter demanding that you pay the unproven debt within 21 days. This is the statutory demand. Somewhere in the wording will be a threat to make you bankrupt or insolvent if you don’t pay up within those 21 days.

You have 18 days from the date of the letter to get to court and file an application for set aside. You’ll need to go to the court to get the two forms you need to do this. According to one advisor, the forms are not very user-friendly so you may want to take them down to your local Citizens Advice Bureau for help filling them out.

Once you’ve filled them out you must hand them back in at the court, where you will also have to swear an affidavit. This is a lot less scary than it sounds. It’s where you say why you want the Demand set aside. Your reason is that the lender will not prove the debt and that you think the MIG was missold so you want the lender to justify it or go through Civil Procedure Rules or a court hearing.

If you’ve been following the Home Repossession Page’s suggestions you’ll already have a ream of letters from the lender, which evade the issue of giving you the proof, you want. If you haven’t been following the Home Repossession Page’s suggestions, here’s a good reason why you should.

Our main source says:

“The proper use of such demands is where the court is used to instigate the distribution of a debtor’s assets in obvious cases of undisputed, proven debt. Make the affidavit part of your application for set aside VERY clear; it has been known for judges to refuse set aside even when it is obvious that the demand was an inappropriate action.”

If you don’t apply to have the demand set aside, the lender will likely go to court and ask to have you made bankrupt. This should involve a hearing and you should be notified of it and have a chance to put your case against it. But your chances are a lot better if you get the original Statutory Demand set aside.

And if all this sounds like a nightmare… yup!

That’s why Grabbey National and Nationwide do it.

Our source reports a particularly nasty use of Statutory Demands by Curtis solicitors of Devon.

“After three letters, within ten days of the third, if their claim is not disputed and just ignored, Curtis may serve a statutory insolvency demand upon you (SID). If you haven’t made your position clear to them, they will ‘twist’ the law and use a SID to make you bankrupt – sounds unbelievable but true! SIDs are inappropriate where no money judgement orders are issued and/or claims are disputed but if you just keep quiet it will be Curtis’ hope that these facts are overlooked by a judge reading their SID, especially when you’ve been shown to be uncooperative by not communicating – you’ll be assumed to be in the wrong. It’s crazy but all of a sudden the onus of proof goes to you, and will probably involve using a solicitor – not the end of the world but still costs time, hassle and money.

IT MAY BE WISE TO ACT VERY QUICKLY [if Curtis is pursuing you]. If you chose to do so, send your correspondence by recorded delivery it needn’t say anymore than is advised on the home-repo website but make it very clear that you are treating the situation seriously but require proof of the claim before you can proceed.

 

Published November 27, 2017

Problems with UK banks and lenders

Having come across similar problems with UK banks and lenders, it doesn’t surprise me that there are strange things afoot behind their decisions to lend or not. I enjoyed your pages and would like to add some information that may be of interest…

A few years ago I (like many others) got into some serious financial problems. I could go into the details if it helps, but to cut a long story short, I consulted an Insolvency practitioner who explained some things:

Banks are unlikely to throw good money after bad if you seriously default on loan payments. They will put a lot of pressure on (debt collectors etc.) and even threaten court action, but what they really want is for you to agree to pay the debt for the rest of you life. They will get court orders to reposes, but if you are in a negative equity situation after the sale, this is when you really start to feel the pressure.

Apparently most large loans are covered internally within banks by insurances. When a borrower defaults, the insurances are cashed, thus covering the loan. This is possible because most banks view loans as ‘low risk’ investments.

Bearing this in mind it is therefore obvious that settlement a settlement can be made. It is possible to re-negotiate the debt to around 8% of the outstanding value! This should be good news for everyone who has ever borrowed honestly, and tried their very best in difficult circumstances to keep the lender happy, and inspite of that has got caught with apparently no way out.

Published September 9, 2017

How to find the right foreclosure attorney in Miami

If you are like other Miamians today, you are being unable to pay your home mortgage. Property values are dropping and also rates of interest are not showing any indications of big improvement. You will be thinking about using the services of a foreclosure attorney to help you through the process. In that case, this could be a bright opportunity for you.

It is very important to hire the best legal team (foreclosure attorney) in your case. If you undergo the process, the result is mostly determined by the ability of your selected attorney. Many individuals often forget this. We have to create a list of qualified foreclosure attorneys to who can help you get the very best person for the case.

To begin with is talent. You need a foreclosure attorney who is actually experienced in the courtroom. While having the ability to speak persuasively in the courtroom is crucial, talent extends far beyond rhetoric. Make certain that your foreclosure attorney also proves a skill for being familiar with complicated financial situations, and trying to think up creative solutions for them. Mortgage lender case is different; an excellent attorney understands that.

Consult your potential attorney, and ask the number of cases they have dealt with. What is actually their win/loss ratio? Have they dealt with a case much like yours before? How did it end up? Don’t be ashamed to ask any of the questions you have. This can be your possibility to make sure you hire the best foreclosure attorney Miami. Asking them questions is certainly one of the foreclosure requisites you should have.

The law business is not just about experience and talent. When your foreclosure attorney is not respectable in the courtroom, your case might possibly be hurt from the beginning. While justice should not really be relating to your attorney’s credibility, anyone who says there will not be courtroom politics at play is naïve. Check with other attorneys, and go online before you decide to choose who can represent your case in courtroom.

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