Posted on 06/10/2011 12:41:30 PM PDT by Palter
But. The forgiven amount has to go on your income taxes. Cant bankrupt out of that.
Not if the mortgage was a no recourse mortgage.
******************************************************
Wouldn’t the banks then have to prove their loss by opening the general ledger ... fat chance, that would show all the third party payers , insurance , payments from servicers mandated by the PSA etc. etc.
Have you ever actually been in a county clerk’s office?
Because it seems pretty clear to me you haven’t the foggiest clue what goes on in there if you could make a comment like that.
You should not be in the real estate market. The bankers are going to see a sucker coming a mile away when you walk in the door.
There have been people who bought their own foreclosed house back at auction for a pittance (sometimes a mere $1) and the difference between the amount that was owing on the defaulted mortgage and said pittance is imputed by the IRS to them as income in that year.
I never said they did MERS right. I just said something like MERS is needed to modernize the way we keep track of property ownership, etc. And, as for forgery and fraud committed to escape the effects of having done MERS wrong, I say, throw the book at them! And let the deadbeats live rent-free until they're ready to move. Then let them rehabilitate the title instead of the kitchen. If that's how the cookie crumbles.
If we can trade stocks and bonds electronically, why not mortgages? Of course, stocks and bonds have always been traded more or less centrally, whereas real estate has always been decentralized, typically to the county level. So, computerization of stock and bond trading was a much easier task than modernization of the mortgage market. The inventors of MERS obviously underestimated the difficulty of what they attempted!
MERS was created to reduce mortgage trading friction. That allowed banks to smoothly offload mortgages to an investment market that was ultimately backed by the taxpayers in the form of Fannie and Freddie and federal bailouts of the too-big-to-fail. That smoothly functioning secondary market enabled the banks to comply with public policy, which was that you had the right to own a house whether or not you pay for it. May the pain continue until we restore adult supervision to the federal government in 2013.
What you never said was the MERS was ILLEGAL! You make it sound like they just made a some kind of business mistake or a marketing error not that the BROKE the law. You are a apologist for the banks illegal activity.
Your premise maybe right but declaring that it was a good idea is just gone wrong isn’t.
By the way did you ever think that if they would have just bothered to follow the law in the first place we wouldn’t have this mess and that the ‘dead beats’ would be out on their rears already and without a leg to stand on?
Not since the era of bag phones, which were much in evidence in the records room, along with the bank of nickel-a-page copiers over in the corner. It was obvious even then that they were way behind the times. One of the offices I visited had just added IBM 3270 terminals (green screen, character mode) to search the grantor-grantee indexes. The others were still using index cards and sets of index books covering date ranges.
Nowadays, of course, they are mostly online. But the systems are a dog's breakfast. Great variability from county to county.
They still need a major overhaul.
Since when is getting real estate law wrong not a business mistake? In any case, if MERS's illegality is so clear, then why are the courts having such a hard time sorting it out? Real estate law is complicated. You can bet plenty of lawyers went over how MERS worked (or was supposed to work) and blessed it as OK. All the banks were trying to do before the system collapsed was to make money serving the public interest, as defined by Barney, namely, that every schlub should be a homeowner, but especially schlubs from the most reliable Democrat constituencies.
MI Court Destroys MERS Finds MERS Transferred Nothing with Bonus Securitizat
“The Court finds that the Assignment, recorded on December 30, 2009 in the Washtenaw County Register of Deeds, serves to transfer nothing. The alleged conveyance failed to comply with the terms and conditions of the PSA and New York Trust law which governs the PSA. The alleged conveyance stated that MERS assigned the Mortgage and Promissory Note to USB, however, there has been no evidence presented to support the chain of the required assignments and endorsements of the mortgage and note as required by the terms and conditions of the PSA.”
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2732934/posts
Separating the Note Payable from the Mortgage is the equivalent of tearing a $100 bill in half, then each holder of one half tries to cash it in for $100 in twenties or silver. It won't fly. The big problem is that the banksters have been getting away with it on a grand scale for years until recently.
cynwoody seems to want a central clearing house for mortgage documents since local County Recorders Offices are obsolete in her mind.
There is/was a central clearing house called MERS.
Only local jurisdictions are the most well suited to handle their own affairs. If it involves hand-delivering paperwork/documents generated by the local agencies like Courts, Inspection, Engineering, Assessor and other divisions then it would be pointless to contact....say...Washington DC to have your property re-assessed.
All the necessary ingredients for filing documents already exist locally, I’m sorry if it interferes with Wall Street’s time frames and technicalities are just a nuisance.
Also, you might want to read towards the bottom of the link ‘Top 10 Mortgage Servicer Abuses.’
The entire writeup is long but covers a lot of territory like bankruptcy issues as well.
And its not like they didn't no the law its been fairly much the same for YEARS! It was a deliberate attempt to unilaterally change the law. Frankly I see little deference between most of these banks and what Bernie Madoff did. The banks lent money they got from someone else charged both parties service fees, then when the loans went sour the foreclosed on the house sold them and got the sale price as well as the difference from the mortgage insurance (Meanwhile charging even more fees) plus what ever they could get out of the 'dead beats' and then they gor TRAP money to help them with their Losses and yet they are the injuryed party! WHAT A CROCK!
Bump for later.
Gosh, didn't the Federal Reserve pick up a bunch of these? That means those "poor people" are all US taxpayers.
Does anyone but me find it curious that a great many online clerks and registries run on software developed by LPS?
"OnCore - Aptitude Solutions" is a perfect example.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.