Coats Schmidt, P.A.Coats Schmidt, P.A.Coats Schmidt, P.A.Coats Schmidt, P.A.
CALL US: 727-456-4462
  • Home
  • Attorney Information
    • Jon B. Coats Jr.
    • Ryan Schmidt
    • J. Patrick Walsh
    • Martha Bolton
    • Alexis Moore
    • Kimberly Sproat
    • Amanda Drummond
  • Practice Areas
    • Business Litigation and Transactions
    • Concierge Legal & Advisory Services
    • Corporate Intelligence & Due Diligence Investigations
    • Condo & HOA Representation
    • Real Estate Litigation and Transactions
    • Probate, Wills, Trusts and Estate
    • Commercial Loan Documentation
    • Landlord / Tenant
    • Foreclosure Defense
  • Resources
  • Blog
  • Contact Us

Widows face foreclosure due to mortgage Catch-22

    Home Florida Law Widows face foreclosure due to mortgage Catch-22
    NextPrevious

    Widows face foreclosure due to mortgage Catch-22

    By joncoats | Florida Law, Foreclosure Law, Loan Modification, Mortgages, Real Estate Law, Short Sale, Uncategorized | Comments are Closed | 7 January, 2013 | 0

    By Drew Harwell, Times |

    “Two years after he died of cancer, Dorothy Jackson’s late husband received a letter from the bank.

    “Dear David A. Jackson Deceased,” the letter said. It was from a Wells Fargo “home preservation specialist,” offering advice if Mr. Jackson had a “change in circumstances.”

    The bank said it was open to helping Jackson’s late husband of five decades, a retired Tampa police sergeant whose death kept Dorothy, 72, from making her monthly payments of more than $2,000.

    But the bank refused to talk to her. Jackson was told her attempts to shrink payments to half that size, closer to what she could afford, would go nowhere.

    The reason: Nearly a decade earlier, though both she and her husband were named on the home’s title, only David signed the loan.

    What might look like a small paperwork oversight became for Jackson and other widows a seemingly insurmountable snare.

    The bank would not let her take over the loan unless its payments were up to date. But to afford that, Jackson needed different loan terms — which the bank would not provide unless she took over the loan.

    Stymied by the Catch-22 and pestered by debt collectors six times a day, Jackson walked to her bookcase and relayed the bank’s offer to her husband’s urn.

    “Honey, if you want to resurrect yourself to come out and refinance our home,” she said, “you go for it.”

    Lawyers and legal-aid counselors call it a sad reality of the housing crisis: Widows refused loan help and forced into foreclosure in the years after their spouses’ death.

    For distressed homeowners, the bureaucratic obstacle course of refinancing in an age of tight credit is hard enough to navigate on its own. But for grieving widows with finances already in disarray, the loan maze and its accompanying fears of losing a family home have proven a demoralizing shock.

    “It’s a clash of circumstances that couldn’t be any more devastating,” said Kathleen Mullin, the executive director of St. Petersburg-based Gulfcoast Legal Services.

    “This problem and the web of paperwork causes so much stress that it can impact (widows’) health, impact their well-being, to the point where they don’t even know what to do. They’re just frozen.”

    Widows caught in this runaround, counselors said, never realized the damage it could cause if only their husband signed the mortgage note. They did not expect it would prevent them from a loan modification that could allow them to keep paying and stay in their homes.

    There’s no public data on how many widows have faced this frustration. But attorneys and counselors say it is a growing problem for surviving spouses – predominately women – barely seen before the foreclosure crisis began.”

    Find the full article here…

     

    Defense of homeowners and real estate investors in foreclosure actions, defenses available in almost every foreclosure, delinquent on mortgage help, foreclosure court info pinellas, foreclosure crisis, Foreclosure defense, foreclosure law info, foreclosure law pinellas, foreclosure lawyer st petersburg, foreclosure process legal help, help with foreclosure process, housing crisis, jon coats law, jon coats legal help, jon coats pinellas real estate law, loan help and forced into foreclosure, pinellas real estate lawyer, real estate legal help pasco county florida, real estate legal help st petersburg florida, real estate litigation pinellas florida, real estate litigation pinellas park fl, Short sales help pinellas florida, signed the mortgage note, St. Petersburg-based Legal Services, Wells Fargo home preservation specialist

    NextPrevious

    Coats Schmidt, P.A.

    4055 Central Avenue
    St. Petersburg, Florida 33713

    Tel 727-456-4462
    Fax 727-456-4463

    Counties Served

    • Pinellas County
    • Hillsborough County
    • Pasco County
    • Polk County
    • Manatee County
    • Sarasota County
    • Citrus County
    • Hernando

    Quick Links

    • Jon B. Coats Jr.
    • Ryan Schmidt
    • J. Patrick Walsh
    ©2018 Coats Schmidt, P.A. All Rights Reserved.
    • Alexis Moore
    • Amanda Drummond
    • Attorney Information
    • Bankruptcy Representation
    • Blog
    • Business Incorporation
    • Business Litigation & Transactions
    • Business Litigation and Transactions
    • Commercial Loan Documentation
    • Concierge Legal & Advisory Services
    • Condo & HOA Representation
    • Contact Us
    • Corporate Intelligence & Due Diligence Investigations
    • Foreclosure Defense
    • Home
    • J. Patrick Walsh
    • Jon B. Coats Jr.
    • Kimberly Sproat
    • Landlord / Tenant
    • Martha Bolton
    • Our Philosophy
    • Personal Injury
    • Practice Areas
    • Privacy Policy
    • Probate, Wills, Trusts and Estate
    • Real Estate Litigation & Transactions
    • Real Estate Litigation and Transactions
    • Resources
    • Ryan Schmidt
    • Short Sale & Load Modification Negotiation
    • Terms of Use
    Coats Schmidt, P.A.