Foreclosure Strategies
May 10 2018
The best way to deal with a foreclosure is to take aggressive legal action when the foreclosure laws... [Read More...]
April 30, 2024 By
At the foreclosure settlement conference a schedule is set up whereby the homeowner has to comply with the mortgage modification application process. This includes submitting an application in a form provided by the lender, following up to provide documentation of financial circumstances and credit worthiness of the homeowner. In circumstances where the homeowner qualifies for the modification of the mortgage there will usually be a period of 3 or 6 months regarding trial payments. The borrower/homeowner must make these trial payments in a timely manner.
In cases where the homeowner fails to qualify to obtain a mortgage modification, the court attorney referee or judge will issue an order releasing the case to a trial part for further litigation action regarding the foreclosure. Usually after the case is released to a trial part the attorneys for the financial institution will bring a motion for summary judgment against the homeowner. In many situations this amounts to a trial on paper whereby the financial institution’s attorneys provide documentation of the homeowner’s default in making payments on the mortgage. The financial institution’s attorneys will request that a special referee be appointed to compute damages as to how much the homeowner owes to the financial institution and to eventually sell the property at a foreclosure auction sale. If the homeowner is represented by an attorney, the attorney for the homeowner will submit opposition papers to this application by the financial institution for summary judgment foreclosure and sale. If the homeowner’s attorney has included counterclaims or affirmative defenses in the foreclosure answer, the attorney at this time can cross move to dismiss the case based on the counterclaims or affirmative defenses.
In cases where a homeowner and their attorney has been successful in opposing the summary judgment motion, the Judge handling the case will eventually schedule the case for a trial.