Originally posted by despritfreya
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Hey, you're NEVER useless!!

We certainly wouldn't mind reaffirming if that's what it takes to make 100% sure that we can keep the house while making payments on time. I just wanted to make sure that our intention to reaffirm would already be enough to secure the house even if the judge would disallow or the lender wouldn't finalize the reaffirmation. I mean, as a borrower, my mother would have done everything she can to reaffirm but but in the end, she can't influence what the judge decides or the lender does. It would be strange to lose a home due to non-reaffirmation if a judge or lender would be to blame that there was no reaffirmation in the first place.
As far as the Act goes, it's basically the regulation that a close relative can take over a mortgage as long as he/she is living in that property. As you know, many mortgages have a "due on sale"-clause that would be triggered if the borrower dies. However, after this act was introduced, these clauses were void if a close family-member (husband/wife, child) living in that property would continue making timely payments. That's why I was curious if it made a difference in regards to this act if the mortgage was reaffirmed or not. If it was indeed reaffirmed, I'm sure the act would apply - I'm just not sure what happens on a discharged mortgage. I would assume the act applies as well - but what I do not know is what's going to happen to the personal liability. The lien would certainly stay under any circumstances.
http://www.ehow.com/info_7743647_hap...ower-dies.html
"In 1982, the Garner-St. Germain Depository Institutions Regulation Act included provisions that prohibited lenders from exercising the due-on-sale clause under a several circumstances. These include transfers to a spouse or child who will live in the residence, to a surviving joint tenant or to a spouse or child in a court-ordered divorce settlement. The debt is still tied to the property, but the new owners in these circumstances are allowed to assume the mortgage."
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