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Foreclosure Forum |
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Prepayment penalty for property in foreclosureWard, please say you can help me. I've been racing through web pages for 3 hours now! My husband and I are trying to buy a property that is in foreclosure. The trustee sale has been postponed once already, but the 30 day extension runs out March 20th. There is a $21,000 hospital lien on the property that the selling agent was *supposed* to be taking care of (she was trying to get it removed). She's been telling us for 3 months that the bank would not send a demand and when they finally did send one, it had the prepayment penalty of $9,500 on it. This did not figure into her plans.....or something (she's not the most competent agent)...and now there isn't enough money to go around. She has waited until the eleventh hour for all of this, and of course, my husband and I are the ones that lose out and get stuck with losing all the money. Various people, including my lender, agent, etc. have said that yes, the bank can charge the prepayment penalty. However, my boss, a private real estate investor, says that there is a section in the California Civil Code that says the lender *can't* charge the prepayment penalty for an owner-occupied residence when the property is in foreclosure. So, my questions are: Can the lender charge the prepayment penalty? If not, what section says such in the California Civil Code? (I'm presuming that if the lender can charge the penalty, then there is not a code saying they can, it just goes along with the other sections about prepayment penalties). Will counties take pennies on the dollar for hospital liens? If this property goes to auction, will the lien stay with it, or will it be foreclosed upon also? Last, what is the definition of "owner-occupied"? The only definition type-thing that I found was a section that said something about the owner occupying the property within 90 days after recording. Oh, and one more question...at auctions, do they really require a cashier's check that day? I've been told by a loan officer that she went and bought property at an auction for a buyer that she had approved for a loan--using just their approval as payment. Does this fly? Randi
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