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Question about homes and walking away

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  • goingcrzy
    replied
    adding my name so I can follow too.

    I want to turn in a lease soon that I have been able to ride through. I am thinking of letting them come get it so I don't have to deal with the dealer and any turn in fees.

    Leave a comment:


  • liz417
    replied
    Originally posted by MrBankruptcy View Post
    I know in a car loan, which is also secured loan, even if you don't sign an affirmation agreement to keep the car on a bankruptcy by keeping current on the payments if you default on the loan after the discharge of the bankruptcy you can be liable for any damage to their property or negative equities.
    Wanted to bump this thread because I wanted to know the source(s) as I plan on giving up a car next year.

    Leave a comment:


  • justbroke
    replied
    Originally posted by MrBankruptcy View Post
    I know in a car loan, which is also secured loan, even if you don't sign an affirmation agreement to keep the car on a bankruptcy by keeping current on the payments if you default on the loan after the discharge of the bankruptcy you can be liable for any damage to their property or negative equities.
    Interesting. I see nowhere in the code that States that you suddenly have in rem responsibility for a vehicle not reaffirmed. The fact is that smart car creditors will force the debtor to choose redeem, surrender or reaffirm. Smart car creditors will not let a debtor "retain and pay" precisely for this reason. If the creditor fails to force a choice, that's their own fault. I do not see how this magically make it an in personam liability again.

    Can you cite several cases for us? Would be interesting.

    Leave a comment:


  • justbroke
    replied
    Originally posted by readytofile View Post
    The conflicting advice is exactly what the people below are saying. Saying that the foreclosure would or wouldn't affect my score.
    A credit score is nothing to worry about. I was talking specifically about the respnosibility of paying the mortgage. You can have your credit report amended to show that the mortgage was IIB (included in bankruptcy), because the fact is, that's the correct status. Otherwise, they would have to remove the tradeline. All 3 of mine read "included in bankruptcy", even the one that was foreclosed.

    Leave a comment:


  • readytofile
    replied
    Originally posted by justbroke View Post
    What did the conflicting advice say? I'm just curious.

    In any event, the debt is discharged. That means, it can't just come back and get you, at all. You can walk at anytime. That is to say, you can walk 1 day after discharge, or 1,000 days after discharge. It would not matter.

    The lender would have no recourse except to foreclose on the property itself... known as an in rem action. The lender would not be able to come after you for any deficiency caused by the foreclosure. They would not even be able to report this to credit bureaus, although you may need to do some "cleanup" after the fact.
    The conflicting advice is exactly what the people below are saying. Saying that the foreclosure would or wouldn't affect my score. At this point my score is over 600 and I'd like for it to go up, not down. If I can't walk away from it without it causing more damage then I would seriously rethink walking away. Even breaking even would be enough reason to fix it up and sell it if possible.

    Leave a comment:


  • liz417
    replied
    Originally posted by MrBankruptcy View Post
    I know in a car loan, which is also secured loan, even if you don't sign an affirmation agreement to keep the car on a bankruptcy by keeping current on the payments if you default on the loan after the discharge of the bankruptcy you can be liable for any damage to their property or negative equities.
    I haven't heard of this....does anyone know if this is true?!??? How would they/you prove that the "damage" was done before or after discharge?? I was discharged last year and was planning on "turning in" my car, it has some bumper damage....HHHHHMMM.....

    Leave a comment:


  • BCA2009
    replied
    Originally posted by MrBankruptcy View Post
    I'm not sure about their home loan being discharged, because if it was the lender would ask them to surrender their property. Many times if you continue to make payments through a bankruptcy they are not too concerned about getting a reaffirmation agreement because their security is the property. I know in a car loan, which is also secured loan, even if you don't sign an affirmation agreement to keep the car on a bankruptcy by keeping current on the payments if you default on the loan after the discharge of the bankruptcy you can be liable for any damage to their property or negative equities. You should check with your bankruptcy attorney to make sure you're not making more trouble for yourself.
    I'm not really sure what you are saying? But if you do not re-affirm the loan on your house, you are discharged of the debt regardless of whether you choose to keep making payments or not. If you do not re-affirm the bank can foreclose. But history shows that if you keep making payment the bank is glad for you to stay in the home.

    Once you are discharged, you are no longer responsible for any debt related to the loan. I'm not sure what you mean by "negative equity".

    Even if the home was damaged, it would be unlikely that you could be held responsible in any way. You would still have insurance on the property thru your escrow payments. Or the bank would put insurance on it itself.

    I guess if you burned it down on purpose, the bank might be able to sue you, but I'm not even sure if they could do that.

    Leave a comment:


  • MrBankruptcy
    replied
    I'm not sure about their home loan being discharged, because if it was the lender would ask them to surrender their property. Many times if you continue to make payments through a bankruptcy they are not too concerned about getting a reaffirmation agreement because their security is the property. I know in a car loan, which is also secured loan, even if you don't sign an affirmation agreement to keep the car on a bankruptcy by keeping current on the payments if you default on the loan after the discharge of the bankruptcy you can be liable for any damage to their property or negative equities. You should check with your bankruptcy attorney to make sure you're not making more trouble for yourself.

    Leave a comment:


  • blessed
    replied
    If you're serious about moving I'd find out the timeline for foreclosures in your area. If it takes a year for the bank to get rolling you might be able to stop paying now. Personally I'd play it really safe and pay longer than necessary before living rent free in the house.

    GL!

    Leave a comment:


  • coolmom04
    replied
    Originally posted by BCA2009 View Post
    Someone also asked if you could sell the home if you didn't re-affirm. Yes you can, as long as you sell it for enough to pay off the outstanding notes 100%.(first, second , third, etc).
    Then anything in excess of that you would get to keep.
    Thank you

    Leave a comment:


  • BCA2009
    replied
    Originally posted by MrBankruptcy View Post
    The lender would have no recourse except to take the property back. Of course that would be a foreclosure added to your credit reporting on top of the bankruptcy. Your credit will be messed up anyways for 10 years and you'll have to start rebuilding it from now on.
    The foreclosure should not show up on the credit report. The loan would show as discharged in BK, it can't also show foreclosed. From what I've read on here, it would show up in your local county records as foreclosed, but it would not effect your credit report.

    Someone also asked if you could sell the home if you didn't re-affirm. Yes you can, as long as you sell it for enough to pay off the outstanding notes 100%.(first, second , third, etc).
    Then anything in excess of that you would get to keep.

    Leave a comment:


  • MrBankruptcy
    replied
    The lender would have no recourse except to take the property back. Of course that would be a foreclosure added to your credit reporting on top of the bankruptcy. Your credit will be messed up anyways for 10 years and you'll have to start rebuilding it from now on.

    Leave a comment:


  • justbroke
    replied
    Originally posted by readytofile View Post
    I'm reading conflicting advice online so I figured I'd check in here.
    What did the conflicting advice say? I'm just curious.

    In any event, the debt is discharged. That means, it can't just come back and get you, at all. You can walk at anytime. That is to say, you can walk 1 day after discharge, or 1,000 days after discharge. It would not matter.

    The lender would have no recourse except to foreclose on the property itself... known as an in rem action. The lender would not be able to come after you for any deficiency caused by the foreclosure. They would not even be able to report this to credit bureaus, although you may need to do some "cleanup" after the fact.

    Leave a comment:


  • liz417
    replied
    Yes, you can walk away from the home because you are not liable for the loan anymore. I did not reaffirm on my home and "walking away" later is an option I'm considering if the home values do not turn around (I don't thing they will for a LONG time).

    Leave a comment:


  • coolmom04
    replied
    Originally posted by readytofile View Post
    I'm reading conflicting advice online so I figured I'd check in here. This forum was a life saver when I went through my bk Who knows...this time next year perhaps the house values will go up and I'll be able to sell it! LOL
    Yeah... I can't imagine going through BK without this forum!!

    I'm really confused about selling the home b/c I thought I read on the forum that you can't sell your home (if you did not reaffirm) unless you've paid off the note/mortgage and you have the deed, but this may not be correct. It doesn't make sense that you wouldn't be able to sell it... but I don't know. I haven't done much research about that.

    Leave a comment:

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