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Property foreclosed by finance comp. Will they payall debts owed from this estate. I had submitted my bill prior to foreclosure ti this
person"s guardian.

2006-12-23 14:39:35 · 8 answers · asked by annieroonie 1 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

8 answers

The foreclosure sale will have a trustees bid that will include principal, trustees fees and arrearage plus lender advances. It is unlikely your bill was considered but should the sale bids exceed the trustees opening bid, your debt if it was in the form of a lien will be paid on a first recorded first paid basis. Should the property revert back to the lender you will have to seek payment from another method. It is not the duty of the lender foreclosing to pay you until they recover their funds first including expenses.

2006-12-23 16:48:52 · answer #1 · answered by Kevin H 4 · 1 0

The only way you get a chance to get your money from the foreclosure of the property is to have a lien on the property. And to answer your question if the finance comp will pay all liens is dependant on the lien position of the company. If it is the first lien position, the credit bid at the auction will be just for it's expenses and lien amount. If, by chance, someone bids more, then the additional monies, will follow the chain of command of lien holders and get paid in that order. Unfortunately judgement liens, which I think you might have, are towards the end of the line. If you think the home is worth all the liens attached, you might want to show up and see if you can win it at the auction.

Regards

2006-12-24 09:51:25 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Property foreclosure only pays off the lender who wrote the loan for the property. The mortgage company won't pay off the credit cards or other debts including any bill you submitted to the estate. You can apply for a lien but it takes many weeks to get this applied to the property and by then it will probably be too late.

2006-12-23 14:57:53 · answer #3 · answered by dcgirl 7 · 0 0

They will put a lean on the property and when it is sold every body gets the money that is owed them. The rest goes where ever to the banks and any left over monies owed must come out of the pocket of the owner or the estate if the person has passed away.

2006-12-23 14:47:47 · answer #4 · answered by ? 6 · 0 0

in case you walk far flung from the residing house and supply up making money, the financial business enterprise will take the residing house decrease back (foreclosure) and it will harm your credit! you will no longer have the skill to purchase yet another residing house, everywhere for countless years! i do no longer propose doing that. a good ingredient of the country is on your place precise now. There are various people who won't be ready to sell their properties for the loan payoff quantities. the terrific ingredient to do is to stay positioned, and save making your money till the industry gets extra suitable. the residing house will at last pass decrease back up in value. What we are experiencing precise now with this housing industry can't be everlasting. do exactly no longer panic and don't enable your place pass to foreclosure!

2016-11-23 14:13:55 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

During the notice of sale period, all creditors have an opportunity to become a part of the foreclosure action. Most do not for various reasons. While they are not guaranteed repayment from the foreclosure, they place themselves in position to reclaim any amounts left over from the sale. You may be entitled to excess proceeds from the sale.

Best of luck.

2006-12-23 15:13:39 · answer #6 · answered by David 3 · 0 0

slap your lien on that property immediately.

it is true that the foreclosure does not cover other debts of the estate. it is a means of the lender recovering past due mortgage payments, their attorney's fees to foreclose, as well as obtaining the property back, so they can sell it to someone that will pay.

2006-12-23 15:02:56 · answer #7 · answered by Louiegirl_Chicago 5 · 1 0

You only receive money if your bill would qualify you to place a lien. If you did not prior to the foreclosure you can't do now, only prior.

2006-12-23 15:07:58 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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