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Stop Foreclosure Assistance - Avoiding Foreclosures the Legal Way
- By Jennifer Walter
- Published 05/29/2009
- Real Estate
- Unrated
Jennifer Walter
Discover how does a deed foreclosure in lieu help lenders as well as tips on how to buy a house after foreclosurefrom the industry experts at http://www.endproperty.com, the premier one stop portal for bank foreclosure on property.
View all articles by Jennifer Walter
At a certain point in anyone’s life, there will come a time when you would need to take out a loan or mortgage. This may be in order to pay any outstanding bills you may have or to pursue a college education. When this need arises, the first thing that would come to the mind of any borrower is to ensure that he or she would be able to meet the financial obligations stipulated in the promissory note in order so as to avoid going through the harrowing experience of a foreclosure.
Going through a foreclosure is an experience that is extremely stressful, frustrating and disheartening. However, learning more about foreclosures, especially the legalities involved in the dissemination of a foreclosure notice is crucial in order to allow you to get by and avoid a foreclosure notice to ever be issued to you.
Reasons for a Foreclosure
Ironically, the primary reason why foreclosures are issued is the very same reason why an individual would take out a loan or mortgage requiring some form of asset to serve as collateral in the first place. In an ideal world, people would be able to earn just enough money to compensate for their needs and wants. In the event that the prices increase, so would their salaries. However, the current global financial crisis currently being experienced is proof that this is not an ideal world. As prices and interest rates continue to rise, Americans all over the country are unable to cope with their numerous financial obligations. As a result, they may experience instances whereby they are unable to meet their financial obligations. When this happens, the risk of getting a foreclosure notice from their creditors or financial institutions increases.
In relation to this, there are some experiences or events in a person’s life that may also cause him or her to receive a foreclosure notice. One of which
is a change of the individual’s lifestyle. This change of lifestyle can be brought by a number of things. Some of these include going through a divorce, a death in the family, illness, retirement or a loss of job. These situations can easily cause an individual to make some changes on their financial priorities, making him or her unable to meet the deadlines imposed by a creditor or financial institution with regards to the money that was initially taken out as a form of a loan or mortgage.
Preventing a Foreclosure Legally
While receiving a foreclosure notice may mean that you are about to lose your home or any other property or asset you have placed as a collateral on a mortgage or loan, it is important to remember that a foreclosure notice is just meant to inform you of the situation in order for you to still have time to do something about it.
The first thing that you should do once you have received the notice of foreclosure is to first inspect the notice and compare this to the contract you have signed in relation to the mortgage or the loan that you have taken out. Your contract would be able provide ample information with regards to which entity or individual would have the authority to issue a notice of foreclosure to with regards to the loan or mortgage that you have taken out. The second thing to carefully inspect is the contents of the notice of foreclosure that has been issued to you. If this is the first time that you are receiving a foreclosure notice from the creditor or financial institution, it should provide you information with regards to the schedule of your Order Authorizing Sale hearing. As the borrower and current owner of the property, it is your legal right to first go through the process of a hearing in order to be given a fair decision with regards to your foreclosure situation. The notice should never, by any means, advise you of the sale of the property unless this happens and you have been properly informed by a public trustee of the hearing.
Going through a foreclosure is an experience that is extremely stressful, frustrating and disheartening. However, learning more about foreclosures, especially the legalities involved in the dissemination of a foreclosure notice is crucial in order to allow you to get by and avoid a foreclosure notice to ever be issued to you.
Reasons for a Foreclosure
Ironically, the primary reason why foreclosures are issued is the very same reason why an individual would take out a loan or mortgage requiring some form of asset to serve as collateral in the first place. In an ideal world, people would be able to earn just enough money to compensate for their needs and wants. In the event that the prices increase, so would their salaries. However, the current global financial crisis currently being experienced is proof that this is not an ideal world. As prices and interest rates continue to rise, Americans all over the country are unable to cope with their numerous financial obligations. As a result, they may experience instances whereby they are unable to meet their financial obligations. When this happens, the risk of getting a foreclosure notice from their creditors or financial institutions increases.
In relation to this, there are some experiences or events in a person’s life that may also cause him or her to receive a foreclosure notice. One of which
Preventing a Foreclosure Legally
While receiving a foreclosure notice may mean that you are about to lose your home or any other property or asset you have placed as a collateral on a mortgage or loan, it is important to remember that a foreclosure notice is just meant to inform you of the situation in order for you to still have time to do something about it.
The first thing that you should do once you have received the notice of foreclosure is to first inspect the notice and compare this to the contract you have signed in relation to the mortgage or the loan that you have taken out. Your contract would be able provide ample information with regards to which entity or individual would have the authority to issue a notice of foreclosure to with regards to the loan or mortgage that you have taken out. The second thing to carefully inspect is the contents of the notice of foreclosure that has been issued to you. If this is the first time that you are receiving a foreclosure notice from the creditor or financial institution, it should provide you information with regards to the schedule of your Order Authorizing Sale hearing. As the borrower and current owner of the property, it is your legal right to first go through the process of a hearing in order to be given a fair decision with regards to your foreclosure situation. The notice should never, by any means, advise you of the sale of the property unless this happens and you have been properly informed by a public trustee of the hearing.

