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Articles Posted in Mortgage

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Buyer at California Foreclosure Loses Because Deed of Trust was forged. A forged deed of trust cannot convey title, even to a bona fide purchaser with no notice of the forgery; and recording a Lis Pendens in a lawsuit is privileged.

It is a general rule of California real estate law that a forged deed is “void,” not merely voidable. Therefore it cannot convey title, even to a good faith purchaser. A good faith purchaser is one who has no knowledge or suspicion of a problem, and pays reasonable value for…

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Californians should wait to 2013 to refinance their purchase money loan- then SB 1069 – CCP 580b may protect them from personal liability

With rates at an all time low, many in California are rushing to refinance their real property mortgage loans. Often, borrowers are not aware that they may expose themselves to personal liability if they refinance the loan they originally used to buy their residence. California has a number of statutes…

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Close your short sale by December 31, 2012 or else – the Mortgage Debt Forgiveness Act is set to expire, and you will be liable to pay tax on forgiven debt.

For tax purposes, housing debt that is forgiven or written off is treated the same as income. The difference between the short sale price, or price at a trustee’s sale, and the loan balance may be forgiven debt. It can be considered income, which is reported by the lender on…

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Recording California deeds of trust & equitable subordination – when a lender can record last, but be considered first, to collect on foreclosure

When it comes to recording liens against California real estate, we follow the ‘first in time, first in right’ rule. (Civil § 2897) If your lien, or deed of trust, is recorded before mine, then yours is superior. If you foreclose, and I do not pay you off, my deed…

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Lender tells California homeowner to skip a payment, and she would probably get loan modification because she was pre-approved – Court finds lender may have wrongfully induced the borrower to place her loan in default

I commonly hear from clients that they were told by their loan servicer that they would not be considered for a loan modification because they were current on payments. They were either told, or it was implied, that they needed to miss a payment in order to be considered for…

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Loan Modification accepted, lender foreclosed anyway, Part 2 – setting aside a wrongful foreclosure, when the borrower does not have to tender payment of the loan balance

My last post was about a California loan modification, where the borrower signed the modification documents and returned them to the lender, but the lender foreclosed anyway. The court decided that the there was a binding contract once the borrower signed and returned the modification agreement, even though the lender…

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California real estate lender surprised that C.C.P. 580b applies to settlement of lawsuit, denied deficiency judgment

It is a given under California law that a seller financing a purchase money loan in the sale of real estate may not get a deficiency judgment against the borrower, but is only entitled to foreclose the property. CCP section 580b provides that, when the buyer purchases property, if buyer…

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New California SB 1069 – CCP 580b protects borrowers from deficiency judgments after refinancing real estate loans

California has a number of statutory provisions that provide borrowers with protection from deficiency judgments- personal liability for the loan balance remaining after a foreclosure sale. There is protection if the seller takes back the note, or, in the case of a standard third party loan, if it is a…

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California title company error delays foreclosure nearly 2 years, but lender cannot get delay damages. What the court requires to prove delay damages for title company error.

Title companies often prepare complicated documents, such as deeds of trust, grant deeds, an promissory notes to accommodate closing escrows, which results in their fees. There can be mistakes that vary in seriousness, and sometimes the only solution is to have the Court order a document re-formed. A recent decision…

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California real estate loans and foreclosure -2 considerations regarding whether you may be personally liable

Several years ago I had written about how to determine whether or not your California real estate loan is a non-recourse loan, and if you lost the property, through foreclosure, would you have personal liability for the remainder of the debt. I did not discuss two other important considerations, even…

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