Friday, February 19, 2010

Law Firm Uses "Reverse Foreclosure" To Stick Foot-Dragging Lender With Title To Unwanted Condo Unit; Has 82 More Cases In Pipeline

In Miami, Florida, Historic City Times reports:

  • In a process known as a “reverse foreclosure,” a Miami-Dade Circuit Court judge has forced a bank to take title to a property from a homeowners association. “It’s new, and it addresses what we think is a huge problem in Florida,” according to published reports from attorney Ben Solomon who represented the South Miami-Dade homeowners association in the case.

  • When the owner [in one case] stopped paying their monthly maintenance fee, the association foreclosed on the home, however, because of the bank’s lien, they could not sell it. The bank had foreclosed but hadn’t pursued the case for a period of 2 1/2 years, leaving the association stuck with a home — and no one paying dues.

  • Solomon said his firm is telling the judge that as the defendants in the bank’s foreclosure proceedings; they want a summary judgment — against themselves. Next, they request an immediate sale date; waiving their rights to a waiting period. Reportedly, Solomon’s firm has filed another 82 similar “reverse foreclosure” requests in courts around the state.

  • The association in this case has 3,000 homes and owns title to about a dozen of them through foreclosures, Solomon said. The reverse foreclosure can only be filed after a homeowner is out of the picture and the home is legally the property of the homeowner association. “That waiting period protects the consumer, but banks are taking advantage of the judicial backlog, and then in many cases they are canceling the sale date and resetting it”, according to Solomon. “What we did was tell the judge, we don’t need more time.” HSBC Bank USA, which acted as trustee in the case, declined to comment. Circuit Judge Jerald Bagley granted the homeowners association motion, and the title was awarded to the bank the same day.

  • We’re not saying they need to complete a foreclosure more quickly than normal,” Solomon said. “But there’s no good reason why that lender has taken 2 1/2 years to foreclose on this particular unit.”

Source: Ruling may help homeowner associations.

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