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Foreclosure Limbo: Staying Without Paying

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    Foreclosure Limbo: Staying Without Paying

    NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- June 9, 2011

    Charles and Jill Segal have not made a mortgage payment in nearly five years but they continue to live in their five-bedroom West Palm Beach, Fla. home.

    Lynn, from St. Petersburg, Fla., has been living without paying for three years.

    In Thousand Oaks, Calif., an actor has missed 30 payments, and still, he has not lost his home.

    They're not alone.

    Some 4.2 million mortgage borrowers are either seriously delinquent or have had their cases referred to lawyers to pursue foreclosure auctions, according to LPS Applied Analytics. Of those, two-thirds have made no payments at all for at least a year, and nearly one-third have gone more than two years.

    These cases can go on and on. Nationwide, it takes an average of 565 days to foreclose on borrowers in default from their first missed payments to the final auction. In New York, the average is 800 days and in Florida, where the "robo-signing" issue is particularly combative, it's 807.

    If they want to fight evictions hard, borrowers can remain in their homes even longer while their cases are being worked through.

    The Segals have been doing that -- in court. They bought their home in 2003 with an adjustable rate mortgage. After a few years, their monthly payments tripled to $3,000, just as their home-inspection business was cratering.

    The Segals want the bank to modify the mortgage so payments are affordable, and they think the court will agree that their lender put them into a toxic loan.

    "The evidence will show that we were defrauded," said Jill Segal.

    If they lose, of course, they'll finally have to leave. And, unfortunately, more than 50 months of missed mortgage payments hasn't translated into big savings.

    "It's very hard to save," said Jill Segal. "Our company's billing is 90% off and my husband is only working about four days a week."

    Lynn, who didn't want her last name used, purchased a two-bedroom on Tampa Bay in 1998 for $135,000.

    As the waterfront property's value skyrocketed, eventually reaching $750,000, she refinanced twice (once to expand a business), and took out a second mortgage. She now owes more than $600,000 on the home, which is worth only $235,000.

    Living in this foreclosure limbo is "Hell," Lynn said. "I feel like I'm locked in a box. I work for a financial organization and if this came out, it could cost me my job."

    She's still hoping to negotiate the loan. In the meantime, small things bother her. "A couple years ago, I lost my dog and I can't decide on getting a new one," she said. If she has to move, she can't be sure she'll go somewhere that allows pets.

    The actor from Thousand Oaks, Calif. began having problems during the screenwriters' strike in late 2007, followed by a threat of a strike by the Screen Actors Guild.

    He's working with his lender toward a mortgage modification, submitting page after page of documents, which the bank has often misplaced or waited so long to examine them that they had grown too old to use.

    His ideal outcome is get the loan modified and get all his late fees waived. He feels entitled to that because the bank advised him to stopped paying in the first place to qualify for one of the government's foreclosure programs. Before that, he had missed only one payment.

    Meanwhile, he has cobbled together some income streams -- small acting parts, teaching acting classes and even handyman work.

    "In a way, I feel like I'm lucky because I haven't had to pay any 'rent' for 30 months," he said.

    But he feels like he's always under a cloud. "I haven't slept in three years," he said. "It's terrifying. I have to have the ultimate poker face in front of my kids."


    Ruben Martinez, a Staten Island, N.Y., man trapped in a particularly bad adjustable rate mortgage, stopped paying more than three years ago. His attorney, Robert Brown, has managed to stave off one foreclosure.

    Martinez, still struggling to find work, has little in savings despite the missed payments. He's earning some income as a pastor and consulting for a non-profit family counseling organization.

    "There's pressure on me every day," he said. "I have a wife, three daughters and two grandchildren. Where are we going to live?"

    More people are in foreclosure limbo -- not paying their mortgage but still in the house.
    There are two secrets for success in life:
    1.) Never tell everything you know.

    #2
    Originally posted by debee View Post

    Charles and Jill Segal have not made a mortgage payment in nearly five years but they continue to live in their five-bedroom West Palm Beach, Fla. home.
    Wow, that's unbelievable. 5 years with no mortgage payments. The more this kind of news gets out, the more likely people will stop paying their under-water mortgages.
    Filed Chapter 7 July 2010
    Attended 341 September 2010
    Discharged November 2010 Closed November 2010

    Comment


      #3
      but the really sad part of that, is they still have been unable to save any money!

      when you think about it, even if they did get the mortgage modified, if they don't have the income since she said:

      "It's very hard to save," said Jill Segal. "Our company's billing is 90% off and my husband is only working about four days a week."
      so in this particular case, aren't they just delaying the unfortunate inevitable fact they will not qualify for a loan mod or new loan?
      8/4/2008 MAKE SURE AND VISIT Tobee's Blogs! http://www.bkforum.com/blog.php?32727-tobee43 and all are welcome to bk forum's Florida State Questions and Answers on BK http://www.bkforum.com/group.php?groupid=9

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by debee View Post
        "It's very hard to save," said Jill Segal. "Our company's billing is 90% off and my husband is only working about four days a week."
        Boy, if you can't save anything when you're not paying a penny in mortgage payments, you really need to "downsize" your expenses.
        Filed/discharged/closed Chapter 7 in 2010!

        Comment


          #5
          My lender came along and padlocked our house before we were even served with Foreclosure papers... I don't understand how it can vary so much from bank to bank.

          Comment


            #6
            It must be awful to live like that knowing that it will not last and eventually will fall apart. But one of the people should have known better with a huge increase in the equity in the house on Tampa Bay....anyone going over their heads like that and utilizing $600,000 of equity. People today live for the moment and do not plan as to what could happen a few years down the road and that is what causes a lot of financial grief when something happens and no plans or back up are in place. Home prices could not continue to rise at the rate they were rising as eventually no one would be able to afford any home...folks signing for toxic mortgages really did not do their homework and wanted the quick fix of being able to get a home they probably could not really afford...hard lessons were learned over the past three or more years since all this started to go down....
            _________________________________________
            Filed 5 Year Chapter 13: April 2002
            Early Buy-Out: April 2006
            Discharge: August 2006

            "A credit card is a snake in your pocket"

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Shanfish View Post
              My lender came along and padlocked our house before we were even served with Foreclosure papers... I don't understand how it can vary so much from bank to bank.
              And as the legal owner, you can unpadlock the house. Until they switch the title over to them, they have no legal right to lock you out of your house.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by helpmeout View Post
                And as the legal owner, you can unpadlock the house. Until they switch the title over to them, they have no legal right to lock you out of your house.
                Fine line here...one needs to read their mortgage paperwork and promissory note paperwork signed at settlement. Note - Cars are repossessed all the time and the car title is still in the owner's name...what they can or cannot do is all spelled out in the papers signed at setttlement between borrower and lender and also by state laws.
                _________________________________________
                Filed 5 Year Chapter 13: April 2002
                Early Buy-Out: April 2006
                Discharge: August 2006

                "A credit card is a snake in your pocket"

                Comment

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