There
is also another way in which a foreclosure can be reversed, but this is more of
a technicality. For any real estate to
change owners, the sale must occur in writing.
It is not possible to transfer real property without a writing. Thus a foreclosure is effectuated in writing
through a Trustee’s Deed. Well, in
Tennessee, foreclosures occur as an auction at the court house steps. The problem is that just because a winner was
selected at the highest bid and the gavel struck does not make the property
sold. It must be conveyed through a
Trustees Deed. Many foreclosures result
in the lending bank buying the property themselves for the amount of the loan. When that is the case there is usually no
hurry to prepare a Deed and it may take them 7 days, 10 days, or 2 weeks to
sign a Trustee’s Deed. If that is the
case and a bankruptcy is filed before the Trustee’s Deed has been signed, then
the sale never actually occurred. So
while technically the foreclosure was not reversed, it was still prevented
after a winner was selected and “sold” during an auction.
Friday, September 27, 2013
Is it Possible to Reverse a Foreclosure?
The short
answer: Maybe. If the foreclosure was
conducted improperly then there are limited remedies, but only in a few rare
situations can a reversal be granted. And those remedies are not statutory
based. Our office has successfully
reversed a foreclosure. In that instance
the homeowner received a letter from her servicer stating that they would not foreclose
on her property within the next 20 days because she was in a modification trial
period. The letter also stated that if
foreclosure proceedings had begun (which they had) they would be ceased. Well our client relied on this letter and
decided not to file a bankruptcy, which would’ve ceased the foreclosure. After the foreclosure the bank tried to evict
her but we showed up to court with that letter and the bank agreed to reverse
the foreclosure.
Labels:
Automatic Stay,
Bankruptcy,
Foreclosure,
Real Estate
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment