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Kokomo bankruptcy attorneys
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Call us at 1-800-966-8447 today!
 


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Indianapolis bankruptcy attorneys
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Call us at 1-800-966-8447 today!
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Stop Foreclosures!


Want to know how bankruptcy can help?

Filing Bankruptcy Stops Mortgage Foreclosure.
Filing Bankruptcy Can Save Your Home!
Filing Bankruptcy Can Allow You To Pay Back Overdue Mortgage Payments Over Time...In low...Easy...Payments.

What Is Mortgage Foreclosure?

Understanding How Mortgage Foreclosure Works?
How To Deal With Mortgage Foreclosure Deficiency.
Don't Wait...Get The Help You Need...NOW.
Buying More Time In Your Home.
Buying More Time To Get Your Home Sold Through A Real Estate Broker.
Getting Rid Of Certain 2nd or 3rd Mortgages.
What About Refinancing To Avoid Foreclosure?

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FILING BANKRUPTCY STOPS MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE

We stop mortgage foreclosures all the time.

As you know, foreclosure is what mortgage lenders start when you get too far behind on the mortgage you have on your home or other real property.  Usually in Indiana, it seems that the foreclosure process gets referred to a foreclosure attorney after 3 months of payments due and owing.

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SAVE YOUR HOME!

I am behind on my payments. What can filing bankruptcy do for me?

Bankruptcy provides you with an opportunity to save your home. The big questions are this: Will your budget allow you to make the regular monthly mortgage payment if you were current?  Do you have enough money left over after paying your regular monthly expenses (including the mortgage payment) that you could cure the mortgage arrears over a 3-5 years.  If so, filing bankruptcy and specifically filing bankruptcy under Chapter 13 could well save your home or that other piece of real property.

When you file a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, your mortgage lender must stop any pending foreclosure and/or sheriff sale. However, this assumes you file bankruptcy before the sheriff sale deadline.

What do we mean by sheriff sale deadline?

You don't have forever. You have to file bankruptcy while there is still property that you own to save. For instance, in Indiana, once the sheriff sale has ended, filing afterwards is too late.

I don't live in Indiana? Does that make a difference?

Absolutely, if the property is not in Indiana. How long you have to file bankruptcy and still stop a foreclosure proceeding is a matter of State law. That is, it all depends on the foreclosure laws of the State the property is located in.

How do I find out for my State?

If your home or real property is in foreclosure, even if there is a threat of foreclosure, contact an experienced bankruptcy attorney. You have nothing to lose. Most experienced bankruptcy attorneys offer a free initial consultation. Don't wait. Call and set up an appointment with a bankruptcy attorney. Whatever you do, don't accept the advice from your mortgage lender as gospel.

What happens after I file a Chapter 13 bankruptcy?

Assuming the plan is to save your home or other real property, once the case is filed, you start making your regular mortgage payments as they come due. Sometimes, the future payments are included in your Chapter 13 plan. Sometimes, you have to make them directly to the mortgage lender.  It will depend on the jurisidiction that your case is filed in.  Luckily for you, the Law Office of Steven P. Taylor, PC has experience in both types of Chapter 13 Plans.

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PAY BACK OVERDUE MORTGAGE PAYMENTS 
OVER TIME...IN LOW....EASY...PAYMENTS

What happens to the mortgage payments I am behind on?

In Chapter 13, we set up a plan of repayment for you, and one of the things you have to pay is all the money that you are behind on with respect to your mortgage, including court costs, attorney fees and late fees. In most cases, you can spread this payment out over the entire duration of your Chapter 13 plan, which is anywhere from 36 to 60 months, depending upon your circumstances. Let's say you were $3,000 behind in your mortgage payments before filing bankruptcy under Chapter 13. And...let's say your Chapter 13 plan is set up to run for 48 months. In most cases, you can pay back the $3,000...without interest or additional late fees...by paying $62.50 per month ($3,000 / 48 = $62.50).

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WHAT IS FORECLOSURE?

Tell me more about mortgage foreclosure. What exactly is mortgage foreclosure?

If you will remember, way back when you got your mortgage, you signed 2 documents. You probably signed a lot more than 2 documents, but the 2 documents I am speaking about were the Note and the Mortgage. The Note was your personal promise to pay for the money you borrowed from the mortgage lender. The Mortgage was your agreement to serve up your home or other real property as "collateral" for the loan. By doing so, you allowed the mortgage lender to put a lien on your real property.

"Foreclosure" is the court proceeding which your mortgage lender starts for the purpose of selling your real property. The mortgage lender then applies the money from the sale of your property toward payment of your debt.

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UNDERSTANDING HOW MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE WORKS?

So, how does mortgage foreclosure work?

Foreclosure is handled somewhat differently from State to State, but using Indiana as an example, here is how it works. When you get far enough behind....usually about 3 months....on your mortgage, to the point where your mortgage lender has reason to believe that you either can't or won't pay your mortgage, the mortgage lender starts foreclosure. This is a court proceeding.
However, before doing so, you will usually get one or more demands for payment. If you still don't pay and catch up your mortgage, the mortgage lender will turn the matter over to an attorney who specializes in handling foreclosures. That attorney will sometimes write you to give you one last chance to catch up your mortgage. Then, you will be sent a letter that tells you that the mortgage lender is exercising its right to "accelerate" your mortgage, which means it is exercising its right to declare your entire mortgage due...as opposed to just your delinquent payments. In Indiana, this is a necessary step before the mortgage lender can start foreclosure. At this point, the mortgage lender will generally refuse to take any partial payments from you because the mortgage lender does not want to do anything to accidentally "waive" its rights to proceed with foreclosure.

There are 3 major steps included in the foreclosure process. First, you have to be served with a Complaint for Foreclosure and Summons. The purpose of this is for the mortgage lender to get permission to sell your real property. This complaint is usually just a formality, because in most cases, there is no question that you are behind on your mortgage payments, and showing that you are behind is usually all the mortgage lender has to show. Once the mortgage lender gets the go-ahead to put your real property up for sale, the mortgage lender, by its foreclosing attorney, then posts and publishes a Notice of Sheriff Sale. This sale may not occur until 90 days have passed from the date that the Summons and Complaint were filed.  A copy of the Notice of Sheriff Sale must be served on you, and...in Indiana...this gives you about 20 days advance notice of the sale.

The sale is then conducted in a public place. Anyone interested in buying your property comes to the sale and bids on your property. This highest bidder gets your property.

The money received from the highest bidder is first applied to pay any outstanding real property taxes, and then it is applied toward payment of your debt with the mortgage lender and...if there is enough money....the costs involved in preserving the property and processing the foreclosure.

After my house is foreclosed, how long is it before I have to move out?

After the foreclosure is complete, someone checks to see if you are still living in the property. If you are still there, the buyer of the property gets the Court involved. The Court would then serve you with a "Writ of Eviction" to vacate the property, which requires you to vacate the property within so many days. If you don't vacate within that time, the Sheriff comes and physically throws you out, along with your family and all your belongings. You are literally put out on the street.

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DEALING WITH THE MORTGAGE DEFICIENCY

Assuming the foreclosure does not bring in enough money to pay off my debt with the mortgage lender, what happens to unpaid part?

Well...that's where the Note comes in. Very simply....you still owe whatever part of the debt is not paid through the sale of your property. This is generally referred to as a "mortgage deficiency". In most cases, the mortgage lender will try to collect upon this Note obligation by suing you personally and taking a judgment against you.

How much can I expect the unpaid part to be?

Every foreclosure sale is different, but the harsh reality is that a foreclosure sale almost never brings anywhere near as much money as when you sell your property through a licensed real estate broker. How much the deficiency is depends on what your real property was worth, and how much value there was in your property above what was owed on your mortgages. For instance, let's say your house was worth $170,000 in the hands of a real estate broker, but only sold for $120,000 at a foreclosure auction. If you had 2 mortgages against it, one for $140,000 (including your past-due payments and the costs of foreclosure), and a second mortgage for $30,000. In this example, after foreclosure, you would still owe $20,000 on your first mortgage loan and $30,000 on your second mortgage loan, for a total of $50,000.

Can filing bankruptcy help me get out from under this mortgage "deficiency"?

Absolutely. The bad new is that you owe it. The good news is that this debt is "unsecured" and most of the time by filing bankruptcy you can get rid of most if not all of this debt. In our example, that may mean getting rid of $50,000 in debt plus all the future interest.

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DON'T WAIT...GET THE HELP YOU NEED...NOW

When should I come to see an attorney about filing bankruptcy?

If your house is in foreclosure or about to be, the answer is now, immediately, today. The sooner the better. The earlier you are in the process of mortgage foreclosure or threatened mortgage foreclosure: (1) the more options you have, (2) the quicker you will find out what your options are, (3) the less the mortgage foreclosure expenses the mortgage lender will have incurred and in turn, the less you will have to pay back, (4) the more time there is to figure out if filing bankruptcy is right for you, and if so, the more time there will be for getting all the documents properly prepared to effect your filing.

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BUY MORE TIME IN YOUR HOME

I'm still living in my house, but what if I can't afford to keep up the payments? What can filing bankruptcy do for me?

Sometimes, there just isn't enough income to continue to afford your home, as for instance where you have lost your job or where you and your spouse have split up.

In this event, filing bankruptcy before the final foreclosure deadline can at least buy you more time in your home. Filing bankruptcy is like throwing a net over the mortgage lender. You see, when you file bankruptcy, the Bankruptcy Court immediate issues a court order that tells all creditors to stop in their tracks until they are given permission by the court to do otherwise. The net is this Court order, and what happens is that your mortgage lender has to stop the foreclosure until it gets permission from the court to continue. Even if the mortgage lender responds as fast as possible, as long as the foreclosure was not final at the time you filed bankruptcy, filing bankruptcy will buy you an additional 30 days in your home. In most cases, it works out to another 2 or 3 months, or more.

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BUY MORE TIME TO GET YOUR HOUSE
SOLD THROUGH A REAL ESTATE BROKER

In addition, by filing bankruptcy before the final foreclosure deadline, you can stop the foreclosure, and if there is enough value in your house to justify selling it, you can buy some time to try to get it sold through a real estate broker. Remember, selling your house through a real estate broker almost always brings more money that having it sold at a foreclosure auction.  Filing Chapter 7 will buy you 3 or more months.  Filing Chapter 13, especially where you agree to pay some "adequate protection" payments to the mortgage lender, can buy you 6 months to a year, depending upon the facts of your situation and the State that you live in.

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GETTING RID OF CERTAIN 2ND OR 3RD MORTGAGES

How else can filing bankruptcy help me with respect to may house?

Sometimes, we can completely strip off and get rid of a 2nd or 3rd mortgage. Under the law, if you file bankruptcy under Chapter 13, you have a right to strip off any mortgage that is completely "unsecured". For instance, say your house is worth $100,000, but you owe $110,000 on the first mortgage, and another $30,000 on a second mortgage. By filing bankruptcy under Chapter 13 (and this assumes you stay in your case to completion), you could strip off the second mortgage completely. If your mortgage payments on the second mortgage are $350 per month. This would save you $350 per month. This might be the difference between keeping your house and making it, on the one hand, or not filing and losing everything.

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WHAT ABOUT REFINANCING TO AVOID FORECLOSURE?

I am behind in my mortgage payments and the foreclosure has already been started. Is it too late to hire a mortgage broker to try to refinance my house?

It probably is too late. First off, in our experience, if your situation is so far gone that you are already in foreclosure, there is little likelihood that a mortgage broker can help you, even assuming the mortgage broker isn't just leading you on to make a few bucks at your expense. The biggest problem is that every day you delay getting in to see an experienced bankruptcy attorney is another day closer to whatever final foreclosure deadline applies in your State. Don't take a chance. If you house is already in foreclosure, even if you are working with a mortgage broker, make an appointment to go see an experienced bankruptcy attorney. You have nothing to lose and everything to gain. Give yourself a backup plan, just in case the refinance does not come through as hoped.

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Call today for a FREE Consultation!
Just call toll free 1-800-966-8447.

 

You need to upgrade your Flash Player
Kokomo bankruptcy attorneys
Indianapolis bankruptcy attorneys
Indiana bankruptcy lawyers
Learn about the new bankruptcy law changes
Please contact us for a DISCREET and FREE consultation.

Call us at 1-800-966-8447 today!
   
   

Copyright © - The Law Office of Steven P. Taylor, P.C.
Indiana Bankruptcy Lawyers, Debt Consolidation Attorneys, Eliminate Bills, Past Due Taxes, Stop Tax Garnishments, Stop Repossessions, Bad Credit, Protect Property, Stop Harassing Phone Calls, Chapter 13, Chapter 7, Debt Relief, Lower Monthly Payments
Serving the state of Indiana