moretrouble
LoanSafe Member
foreclosure is a claim and barred by the post-chapter 7 discharge injunction:
Interesting. Are you trying to get a question certified? You go Mo!A week ago, I sent a three-page summary to an attorney who I consulted with before I filed my petition to the state S C. Then, We spent about an hour talking and I paid him$325/hr. This time, I asked him to go over the material first then give me a time to discuss. He never responded. My guess he doesn’t want to read, just want to chit chat and charge for his time.
So, are you saying that your attorney, whom you have retained for this case, has just ghosted you? If he has taken you on as a client, and has not informed you that he is withdrawing as your attorney, that could be worth a bar complaint.Recently received a notice of sale. Now my attorney who should be going ex parte for a TRO has mysteriously vanished. Gulp. This is precisely why it's essential to have a plan B, C and D firmly in place at all times.
I'm preparing complaints to the CFPB and California's version the DFPI. Then might as well include the Attorney General and even the DA since the NOS revived my FDCPA claim. Both are supposed to be able to enforce debt collection rules under their general law enforcement authority not that they will but making noise is good. Also some of this kinda qualifies as criminal. After all threatening to do something they can't legally do that would cause irreparable harm while demanding I give them money I don't owe is extortion, no attempted extortion.
And of course filing a Chapter 13 as a last resort, maybe naming them as an unsecured creditor since they've materially breached the contract or else secured but only with regard to the debt amount and not the intervening payments.
Sorry for having gone awol here. Needed some time to remember that life isn't just about mortgage law........
Try researching ' Anticipatory Repudiation'. If one party says or does something that leads the other party to reasonably believe that continued performance is not reasonably possible, for example, then you may have a claim for anticipatory repudiation. For example, if you make payments in good faith, and the note has not been accelerated, but the lender refuses to apply those payments, you can argue that their action of refusing payments makes it "not reasonably possible" for you to hold up your end of the agreement.If a Lender reverses payments, does anyone know if this is an effective repudiation of the contract? In other words, is the contract is impossible to perform where a borrower can not control payment application. We have some discussion in the past but alas bookmarks gone.
Hello Krafty,So, are you saying that your attorney, whom you have retained for this case, has just ghosted you? If he has taken you on as a client, and has not informed you that he is withdrawing as your attorney, that could be worth a bar complaint.
I couldn't agree more. It's been a learning experience to say the least! You can't win by doing nothing more than responding to these foreclosure actions. One really needs to become proactive and lead to a resolution. Limbo is not winning. (although at one point it felt like it)I and maybe all of us been focus on the wrong approach, playing defense instead of offense. We ‘ve been busy on foreclosure defense instead of suing the banks’ attorneys and witnesses for frauds. The key to winning is having proofs of their perjuries in court under oaths. Let them sell the house, just add the loss to the claim plus triple the damages.
As for staying in the home providing compensation, not even. We are not renters or tenants. We made a down payment, paid taxes and insurance, provided maintance on the property as an investment.The benefit for which we bargained was title. The money you spent fighting foreclosure was intended to pay down the debt towards that end. Their actions forced you to divert that money into preventing them from wrongfully taking your property thereby frustrating the purpose of the contract.Hello Krafty,
Long time no hear. Hope you're doing well. Some of us are still here. For now, I think I've read enough cases and laws to be able whip out a challenge to a new writ, a tort suit in the state court, and a federal suit in a couple weeks. Obviously, I don't want to overpay my mortgage payments by spending too much time on legal issues concerning the purported foreclosure. I've decided against initiate the federal suit on my own because lack of impending injury (house is not being sold) which will affect the federal judge's opinion. Judge would likely says "Your damage by spending hours and costs are being compensated by non-payment". It would be different if the banks are trying to steal the house by using fake note and grossly-inflated allegedly-owed amount and I were just trying to fight back. I can still contribute to fighting the crooks by monitoring court cases and informing homeowners of potential fraud.
In conclusion, status quo is best.