Lenders Not Showing Any Love In The City Of Brotherly Love

Foreclosure Filings Up In Philadelphia

CBS News Philadelphia

There is more than a 30 percent increase in foreclosure filings in the Philadelphia area than this time last year and experts are expecting it to rise.

CLARIFI provides foreclosure counseling in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Patricia Hasson is the nonprofits president.

“And if they work with a housing councilor they can get into a program like HAMP (HomeAffordable Modification Program) which is a technical term, but it’s a modification program that will allow them to stay in their home at potentially reduced interests longer terms.”

Hasson says a major reason why foreclosures are on the rise in Pennsylvania is the elimination of the state’s HEMAP– Home Emergency Mortgage Assistance Program, that program stops the foreclosure process while homeowners considered options. She is hoping that lawmakers will reinstate that program in the future.

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Sale can’t be set aside for late bidder

Zack Needles,  The Legal Intelligencer

The state Superior Court has ruled that a sheriff’s sale of real estate in Middlesex, Butler County, cannot be set aside simply because a buyer came forward after the fact and made a substantially higher offer.

A split three-judge panel said Butler County Common Pleas Judge S. Michael Yeager abused his discretion when he set aside the sheriff’s sale of a home after the estate of the homeowner found a buyer willing to pay more than double what it sold for.

Judge Christine L. Donohue said appellants Gregory Simakas and Michael Newman, the winning bidders, had lawfully purchased the property at issue.

“If the property can be resold at a profit, appellants are entitled to reap the reward of the risk they took in purchasing the property at the sheriff’s sale,” Judge Donohue said. She was joined by Judge John L. Musmanno.

Senior Judge Robert E. Colville, however, dissented, saying he did not believe Mr. Simakas and Mr. Newman had properly preserved their issues for appeal.

On Feb. 13, 2009, according to Judge Donohue’s opinion in Bank of America vs. Estate of Robert L. Hood, the bank filed a complaint in foreclosure against a house and 100 acres of property owned by the estate, and the property was put up for sheriff’s sale on Sept. 17, 2010.

The acreage sits between West Cruikshank Road and List Hill Road.

The outstanding mortgage on that date was about $204,000, according to Judge Donohue, and Mr. Simakas and Mr. Newman purchased the house at the sheriff’s sale with the winning bid of $255,800.

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N.J. Supreme Court order clarifies foreclosure paperwork for mortgage lenders

Sarah Portlock, The Star-Ledger

The state’s chief justice has given financial institutions that are foreclosing on homeowners more direction about how to file proper foreclosure paperwork.

The judicial order, signed Wednesday by New Jersey Supreme Court Chief Justice Stuart Rabner, comes six weeks after the high court ruled unanimously that a mortgage lender must list its own name and contact information, as well as that of the loan’s servicer, on the document that initiates the foreclosure process, known as the notice of intent to foreclose. Because many loans have been bundled and sold to investors, financial institutions have often only listed the servicer, a third party that collects monthly payments.

Any filing that only lists the servicer is now considered deficient, and the court order said the loan holder must submit additional information for uncontested foreclosure filings so a judge can make a decision. Nearly 95 percent of foreclosures in New Jersey are uncontested, the court has said. The lender must also send a copy of the updated paperwork to the homeowner.

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NJ Supremes Say Lender Must Be Named In Foreclosure Complaint

Rule In Favor Of Guillaumes

David Voreacos and David McLaughlin, Bloomberg

NJ Supremes say name lendersNew Jersey’s Supreme Court ruled that the lender must be named in documents indicating a bank’s intention to foreclose on a mortgage before a residential property can be seized.

The case involves the foreclosure on an East Orange home owned by Maryse and Emilio Guillaume, who received a notice of intention to foreclose in May 2008. That notice included the name of the mortgage servicer, America’s Servicing Co., while omitting the name of the lender.Credit Suisse AG (CSGN) made the loan and assigned it to US Bank NA.

The state high court in Trenton ruled yesterday that the notice sent to the Guillaumes failed to comply with New Jersey’s Fair Foreclosure Act, which requires the name and address of the actual lender, as well as contact information for a loan servicer. Failure to do so creates “potential for significant prejudice” to homeowners, the court said.

“A misunderstanding about a lender’s identity could prompt a homeowner to make a critical error at a time when he or she is struggling to avert foreclosure,” the court said in the opinion.

The court ruled that while a trial court judge erred on that point in interpreting the Fair Foreclosure Act, the judge reached the correct conclusion in ordering a default judgment against the couple. The Guillaumes failed to demonstrate either “excusable neglect” or a “meritorious defense” to their foreclosure, according to the ruling.

‘Restores Order’

The decision “restores order” to New Jersey’s real estate market, said Mark Melodia, a lawyer for Minneapolis-based US Bancorp (USB), the parent of US Bank.

“This is a reaffirmation that our Chancery Court judges are best positioned to determine in a given case whether a technical defect in foreclosure paperwork requires the extraordinary step of dismissing the case — which, like this one, may have been pending for years before the defect was identified — or whether a less drastic remedy, such as sending a new notice, is the fairer way to proceed,” Melodia, of Reed Smith LLP, said in a statement.

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