Mortgage, tax bills ultimately come back to haunt walkaways

Mortgage, tax bills ultimately come back to haunt walkaways

While foreclosures and loan modifications have made it tough for overwhelmed banks to go after walkaway borrowers, there’s evidence they are starting to crack down.

Lenders are hiring collection agencies. They also are getting deficiency judgments — court orders that allow banks to collect on mortgage balances. Once an order is in place, lenders can garnish wages, tap bank accounts, seize tax refunds and put liens on other assets to satisfy the debt. These judgments also show up on credit reports.

If the lender sells the home after a foreclosure for less than what is owed on the loan, the bank can come after the borrower for the deficiency balance.

Many states give mortgage holders as long as five years to seek a deficiency judgment. If a judgment is granted, the bank gets up to 20 years to collect and the option to renew for another 20 years if the debt isn’t paid. In Michigan, lenders have six years from the date the last payment was due — or 36 years on a 30-year mortgage, said Southfield real estate attorney John E. Jacobs.

Desperate condo, homeowner groups given new way to grab overdue fees

Desperate condo, homeowner groups given new way to grab overdue fees

Revenue-starved condominium and homeowners associations struggling to keep the taps running and the lawns mowed have found a novel way to squeeze money from units that don’t pay what they owe.

It’s called a reverse foreclosure, a tool that can force banks to pay association maintenance fees when unit owners don’t.

It’s a way for associations to halt the decline that begins when one owner quits paying maintenance fees, followed by another, then another, forcing a reduction in general maintenance, driving down property values even more, and leaving a community riddled with vacancies and vandalism.

Also, it’s a way for associations to stick it to banks — who they are convinced have been sticking it to them since the real estate meltdown began.

Bulk Acquisition of Florida Distressed Condominiums

Bulk Acquisition of Florida Distressed Condominiums

Unbridled development of Florida condominium projects from 2003 to 2007 and subsequent collapse of the residential real estate market have contributed to the latest trend in Florida real estate investment: acquisition of the fractured condominium. Investors in Florida fractured condominiums include a significant number of out-of-state companies. As these investors look to their primary legal counsel for initial guidance on such transactions, this article is intended to introduce the non-Florida attorney to the legal issues and concerns associated with the bulk acquisition of units in a distressed Florida condominium project.1

By 2007, development of condominium projects, both new construction as well as conversion of apartment communities, far exceeded demand. The real estate bubble ultimately burst, leaving in its wake hundreds of failed projects.

Second homes: North Miami’s slice of paradise [South Florida]

Second homes: North Miami’s slice of paradise [South Florida]

Just after World War II, Bal Harbour became one of the first planned municipalities in Florida with underground utilities. Since then, the tiny village’s relentless pursuit of aesthetic perfection has never waned, and from its famous palm-lined entrance to its perfect beach and world-class luxury shopping mall, it’s a resort community a movie-set designer might have created, all in less than 1 immaculate square mile. Recently, Bal Harbour’s influence has spread to its neighboring cities, creating an array of choices just north of Miami for second-home owners craving the sun, sand and South Florida lifestyle.

“When I moved here 17 years ago, there were about 20 municipalities in (Miami-Dade) County, and now there are 35,” says Todd Nordstrom, president of Nordstrom Network/Keller Williams Realty. “There used to be all these unincorporated areas with kitschy waterfront motels, but they’ve become cities, trying to remake themselves into another Bal Harbour.”

Most are laid out on the narrow barrier islands just north of Miami Beach, along the same Collins Avenue famed for its nightlife in Miami’s South Beach. The main ones are Bal Harbour, Sunny Isles Beach, Aventura and North Miami, and they all sit conveniently between Miami and Fort Lauderdale, with easy access to the cultural offerings and airports of each city, but with what Nordstrom describes as a “quiet, easy lifestyle” in comparison.

Richard White: Reserves help associations, owners plan for the future

Richard White: Reserves help associations, owners plan for the future

Q. I live in a small HOA. In November our board approved the budget for 2010. It included funds for painting, but the painting is not scheduled for three years. The funds are being placed in a line item called reserves for the use of people who are not owners as yet.

Our turnover shows that we will have 30 percent new owners when the painting is scheduled. I read FS 720 about the budget should be each year close to zero dollars.

If we are not painting for three years, the reserves should not be collected as the money can be misused and maybe squirreled away as it cannot be controlled.

Am I correct that this is illegal to force me to pay for future expenses?

Florida Foreclosure Auction Web Sites Confuse Consumers

Florida Foreclosure Auction Web Sites Confuse Consumers

Over the past year, I’ve covered Florida’s deep foreclosure problem on multiple occasions. To attempt to cope with the growing foreclosure inventory, the state government has turned to an eBay-like online foreclosure auction system. While utilizing the Internet may be a smart means for making the auction process easier, it also opens up these auctions to a much wider, less experienced pool of potential buyers — anyone with an Internet connection. But some of those new users who think they’re getting an incredible deal on a foreclosed property are actually getting ripped off instead.

Florida’s housing market was one of the most brutalized by the housing bubble’s pop. The state’s economy was very dependent on its real estate industry. In 2009 alone it recorded over a half-million foreclosures, according to RealtyTrac. In Florida 26% of all mortgages are at least one payment past due, reports the Mortgage Bankers Association. So you can see why the state needs to do something to whittle down its growing inventory of foreclosed properties.

The state government is trying to do just that through its new online auction system, administered through realauction.com. First rolled out late last year, counties across the state are slowly adopting these online auction systems accessed through their Clerk of Court’s webites. Miami-Dade’s site went live in January.