Avoiding Foreclosure by Demanding the Lender Prove Ownership Stockton CA
If you are upside down on your mortgage, bear this in mind, that the banks are upside down too. They are not only upside down in terms of their own balance sheets, but also in terms of their recordkeeping.
James Edward Ganzer
1617 SAINT MARKS PLZ STE A STOCKTON, CA James Edward Ganzer 1617 SAINT MARKS PLZ STE A STOCKTON, CA 95207
Specialties Business, Bankruptcy, Real Estate Education McGeorge School of Law, University of the Pacific,Sacramento State University,University of Californ State Licensing California
Data Provided by: Nathan R McGuire
209-948-8200 509 W. Weber Avenue, 5th Floor Stockton, CA Nathan R McGuire 209-948-8200 509 W. Weber Avenue, 5th Floor Stockton, CA 95203
Specialties Land Use & Zoning, Real Estate, Residential, Construction Education University of California, Davis Davis School of Law,Saint Mary's College of California,Saint Mary's State Licensing California
Data Provided by: John C. Roster
209-952-4547 1810 Grand Canal Blvd #4 Stockton, CA John C. Roster 209-952-4547 1810 Grand Canal Blvd #4 Stockton, CA 95207
Specialties Business, Estate Planning, Real Estate, Litigation Education U of San Francisco SOL,Univ of San Francisco State Licensing California
Data Provided by: Clifford W Stevens
509 W. Weber Avenue, 5th Floor Stockton, CA Clifford W Stevens 509 W. Weber Avenue, 5th Floor Stockton, CA 95203
Specialties Chapter 11, Real Estate, Litigation, Business Education McGeorge School of Law, University of the Pacific,California State University State Licensing California
Data Provided by: Ruel Jay Allen
209-478-4048 1036 W Robinhood Dr #202 Stockton, CA Ruel Jay Allen 209-478-4048 1036 W Robinhood Dr #202 Stockton, CA 95207
Education Brigham Young Univ J Reuben Clark LS UT,Brigham Young Univ State Licensing California, Washington
Data Provided by: Jay Michael Hislop
209-954-0180 2155 W March Ln Ste 2e Stockton, CA Jay Michael Hislop 209-954-0180 2155 W March Ln Ste 2e Stockton, CA 95207
Specialties Business, Employment, Real Estate, Litigation Education Humphreys College of Law at Stockton,Univ of California Berkeley State Licensing California
Data Provided by: Mia Susanne Brown
209-948-8200 509 W. Weber Avenue, 5th Floor Stockton, CA Mia Susanne Brown 209-948-8200 509 W. Weber Avenue, 5th Floor Stockton, CA 95203
Specialties Real Estate, Government, Environmental Education McGeorge School of Law, University of the Pacific,University of California State Licensing California
Data Provided by: William Frederick Cook
1810 GRAND CANAL BLVD STE 6 STOCKTON, CA William Frederick Cook 1810 GRAND CANAL BLVD STE 6 STOCKTON, CA 95207
Specialties Real Estate, LLC, Partnership, Business, Agriculture Education University of California - Santa Barbara,University of California School of Law (Boalt Hall) State Licensing California
Data Provided by: David Ronald LeBeouf
5250 CLAREMONT AVE STE 245 STOCKTON, CA David Ronald LeBeouf 5250 CLAREMONT AVE STE 245 STOCKTON, CA 95207
Specialties Business, Real Estate, Corporate, Contracts Education McGeorge School of Law, University of the Pacific,University of California - Berkeley State Licensing California
Data Provided by: Steven A. Herum
2291 W MARCH LN STE B100 STOCKTON, CA Steven A. Herum 2291 W MARCH LN STE B100 STOCKTON, CA 95207
Specialties Land Use & Zoning, Construction, Litigation, Real Estate Education University of California, Hastings College of the Law,Stanford University State Licensing California
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If you are upside down on your mortgage, bear this in mind, that the banks are upside down too. They are not only upside down in terms of their own balance sheets, but also in terms of their recordkeeping. If you cannot make your mortgage payments and do not think you will be able to catch up, do not despair. The only person or entity that can displace you from your house is the entity that actually owns the mortgage and holds the note to prove it.
What did the holder of the note do with that document? Not so long ago it was put in a vault or a file, so that if the homeowner fell behind in payments, the owner of the note was able to locate the document that proved ownership of the debt. But in the frenzy of greed that characterized the last few years, this practice was substantially modified. Instead of keeping the original note securely, those notes were packaged with hundreds or thousands of other notes. They were sliced and diced and sold, and resold and passed on again. There is a reasonable chance that if you fall behind on your payments, no one will be able to produce the original note and so no one will be able to say to a court of law that they for sure are the owner of the note. True, there will be a record of payments but this may not be sufficient to establish actual ownership of the note.
Some distressed homeowners have been going to court, and when the time comes for that dreadful moment for them to hear that they have been foreclosed upon, instead the intrepid homeowner speaks up and says, "Where is the original note?" Some courts are proving sympathetic to such a challenge, and have put the alleged owner of the note to the task of proving they are indeed the true owner.
The homeowner proves ownership by means of a grant deed recorded at the county recorder's office. The mortgage holder proves ownership of the mortgage debt by producing the original deed of trust that is evidence of the indebtedness. If this document cannot be produced, how can the homeowner be dispossessed?
The banks did very well out of the enormous run‑up in home prices in the past ten years. Their shareholders did well and their executives took home millions in bonuses. But now that times are hard, they have gone to the government for billions of dollars in bailout money.
The homeowner should not be held to a different standard. Ownership is not a technicality that a bank should be allowed to ignore. Banks have already played their hand. The homeowner must now have a chance to play as well. But there is a difference. The homeowner must put food on the table, must bring up the children, must take responsibility for all of the incidents of life. If it is possible to stay in one's home, duly purchased and duly paid for, even though one is now in some financial difficulty, then stand firm on the law that says no one has a better right unless they can actually prove it.
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