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Articles Posted in real estate loan

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Mixed Collateral Security – What the Lender Must Do to Be Sure It Avoids The California Antideficiency Rules

When the same debt is secured by liens on both real property and personal property, the lender has options as to how they are allowed to enforce their security interest. They can enforce against the real property under real property law, against personal property under the Commercial Code, or both.…

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Drafting a lawsuit when the lender denies a permanent loan modification after a HAMP trial Period – Some Necessary Allegations

I have written before about courts calling to account lenders who reneg on loan modifications after the borrower made numerous trial plan payments. Courts have ruled against lenders based on promissory estoppel, offer and acceptance creating a contract, for lack of a signed, written modification; and lack of a modification…

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The Sham Guaranty in California – How to Avoid By Making Sure There is Separation Beween the Borrowower & Guarantor

I have written in the past about Sham Guaranties – this is a guaranty of a loan where the guarantor has such a close identity with the borrower that they are in effect providing a guaranty of their own loan. Such a sham guaranty is not enforceable. A typical scenario…

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When Can You Use Equitable Subordination of California Real Estate Loans To Get The Priority You Bargained For?

  “Equitable subordination” is used to correct equitable wrongs in the priority of liens on real property. If fairness requires, a first lien or deed of trust can be subordinated, or reduced in priority below, a second lien, swapping their positions. (Civ. Code, §§ 2876, 2903, 2904. A lengthy description…

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Fraud in the inducement evidence not barred in real estate contracts between sophisticated parties

I recently described a decision that overruled the rule that a borrower may not make a claim for fraud based on the other party misrepresenting what the contract will say (The Pendergrass Rule). In the past borrowers who claimed that their mortgage broker or lender made promises about their loan…

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The Performance Deed of Trust, Used in California to Secure Obligations other than Payment of Money. When It Can Be Reconveyed.

A Deed of Trust in California can be used to secure contract obligations other payment of money. Usually, the primary obligation secured is the repayment of the loan. There are ancillary duties usually set out in the deed of trust, such as keeping the property in good repair, maintaining insurance,…

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How Old Can A Mortgage or Deed of Trust be and still be Enforced in California? The MRTA Provides An Answer.

The Marketable Record Title Act (MRTA, Civil Code section 882.02+) was enacted so that ‘ancient mortgages’ would not last forever. Prior to the act, lost or forgotten mortgages and deeds of trust would continue to be a cloud on title. The MRTA became law in 1982 to put an outside…

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California ‘One Action Rule’ may not apply if the property is out-of-state

Code of Civil Procedure §726 is referred to as the “one action rule,” and the “security first rule.” It provides that, where there is a debt secured by real estate, there may only be one form of action to collect the debt, and that remedy is foreclosure. If it is…

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The Sham Guaranty – where the guarantor shares a substantial identity with the borrower, the guaranty may be found invalid in California real estate loans.

A Loan Guaranty is a promise by the guarantor to pay the debt of another. In commercial real estate loans they are commonly used to provide additional security to the lender. Such loans are often given to new entities without a financial history, and the lender wants a person (with…

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A Home was excluded from a loan guaranty, but the proceeds from sale of the home were not protected. What a surprised guarantor left out.

Loan guaranties are contracts in which the guarantor promises to pay the debt if the principal debtor fails to pay. This is not what happens when someone thinks they guaranteed a home mortgage loan for their son or their significant other- they are usually equally liable on the loan. A…

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