Special offer

Is it Immoral, lacking in Integrity to Stop Paying Your Mortgage?

Reblogger Fernando Herboso - Associate Broker MD, & VA
Managing Real Estate Broker with Maxus Realty Group of Samson Properties Broker - Realtor - CEO

 

Short Sales Maryland

A question being asked frequently by homeowners. . 

 Is it Immoral or lacking in integrity to STOP paying your mortgage?

Perhaps it is fair to put the banks under the same fire. . .

 Is it Immoral or lacking in integrity to give loans recklessly and then seek the help from the Government when you are in trouble?

Are Homeowners being judged unjustly under a complete different set of standards?

 

Banks continue to be reckless giving bonuses and throwing parties while getting help from the Obama Administration. .  . .with the pretense that they are supposed to been  working with people to help them avoid a foreclosure

Enter LOAN MODIFICATIONS with the MORTIFICATION that you will owe so much more to the bank that your home is really worth. . therefore you will be required to make these payment for the next 5?, 10?,  15 Years . .while your house's value catches up to your mortgage loan.

C'MOM MAN!

 

 

 

Original content by Susan Goulding 01490605

This question - Is it Immoral or lacking in integrity to STOP paying your mortgage?

This question has been asked over and over again. I'm not here to give an answer.  I do know that in my communities of Tracy and Mountain House, CA the real estate market has taken a 50% dive in the past 3 years. 

Numerous home owners have asked this question.....

Here are a couple of things to consider....

1) The homeowner didn't borrow money from grandma, friends and then say "Sorry not paying you and you can't have anything of mine."

2) This was a bilateral contract -- the BANK agreed to loan the HOMEOWNER money, using the HOME as collateral.  What does that mean?  It means - as long as the homeowner pays the bank they get to keep their house.  If the homeowner STOPS paying the mortgage the bank get the house.  (aka Foreclosure)

We can modify that agreement via a Loan Mod or a SHORT SALE. Either of these options modify the agreement, as the homeowner is trying to renegotiate the original agreement.

I'm not going to pass judgement, I do know that there are tons of homeowners in Tracy and Mountain House   contemplating a Short Sale, Loan Mod, or Foreclosure, that desperately need some advise, compassion and direction.  The "fear factor" for them is at an all time high.  

I'd love to hear your thoughts on this -- weigh in. ---

 

Tracy & Mountain House, CA

RSS Feed

Follow me on Twitter

Find me on Facebook

Link with me on Linked IN

209-914-5573  Susan@SusanGoulding.com

Tracy or Mountain House, CA home buyers or sellers call us for help.
I have a team ready to handle all your Real Estate needs - REO, Short Sale, Investing, First Time Home Buying.... call me I'm ready to help you accomplish your goals.  Keller Williams Tracy/Mountain House

Jim Hale
ACTIONAGENTS.NET - Eugene, OR
Eugene Oregon's Best Home Search Website

If, on the other hand (there's always an other hand), values had gone up and up, would it have been appropriate for the homeowner to fork over some of that equity to the lender...just because the wind fell upward?

As the original post suggests, this is not an easy moral question.  Indeed, it is a national dilemma.

Dec 30, 2009 04:16 AM