My husband and I have been trying to buy a house for 2 years. We both pay our bills on time and make decent money. The problem is that a few years ago he co-signed for a house for his sister. She moved out and quit paying for it and no one informed him until 3 days before it was supposed to foreclose in his name. They said we had to pay $85,000 when he only cosigned originally for $50,000 or the mortgage company was going to sue. She had put all her credit card debts and her car loan on the mortgage. So he filed bankruptcy to avoid being sued for $85,000. Now all debt and credit is in my name which brought down my credit score and he has a bankruptcy on his credit report. We can't seem to find any bank that will loan us the money to buy a house because they say my debt versus income to not good enough and his name can't be on the house because of the bankruptcy. What can we do to buy a house?
2007-08-01
04:30:24
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3 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Business & Finance
➔ Renting & Real Estate
It's been 3 years since the bankruptcy. They did try to contact us many times, but they were mailing it to the address that he cosigned for. We lived somewhere else and didn't know his sister moved out. They finally found us last minute. He had signed when she did refinancing at one time, but he he didn't realize how much it was for and didn't think his own sister would screw him over.
2007-08-01
04:52:04 ·
update #1
The worst part about it is that even with a bankruptcy he still has an awesome credit score and hardly any debt. He always has been very responsible when it comes to paying bills. One lender at our bank knows that we always pay off our loans, but he can't seem to convince the other guys that don't know us that they are safe to loan us the money for a house. So some advice to people: don't ever cosign for anyone. Even if you think you can trust them. It gets honest people like us into a lot of trouble.
2007-08-01
04:55:10 ·
update #2