California's Short Sale Anti-Deficiency Law, SB 931, Takes Effect January 1, 2011

Reblogger
Real Estate Agent with Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate CA BRE#01363932

Elizabeth Weintraub works in the heart of short sale land in and about Sacramento. She (and I) have been counting down the days until SB 931 goes into effect. I have been avoiding listing short sales during the final months of 2010, waiting until I could offer more hope to sellers when SB 931 goes into effect. Some say there will be more foreclosures as banks factor in the effect of not being able to sell the deficiency to collection companies. Time will tell! Meanwhile, it's the best time in a long time to list your San Ramon, Danville, Dublin or Pleasanton CA home for sale as a short sale. Benefit from SB 931 and low inventory.

Original content by Elizabeth Weintraub Sacramento Realtor Top 1% DRE #00697006

SB 931 california anti deficiency law short salesBecause today is Dec 31, 2010, most County Recorder's offices are closed throughout California, although, I can't imagine any Sacramento short sale seller wanting to close at the end of December with SB 931 positioned on the horizon. SB 931 is the anti-deficiency law passed in California that says when a lender in first position agrees to a short sale, it cannot pursue the seller for a deficiency judgment. It does not apply to foreclosures.

I'm working on 3 Bank of America short sales at the moment, all of which were scheduled to close this week. In 2 of these short sales, the bank has refused to submit a letter releasing liability. In the 3rd Sacramento short sale, Bank of America issued an amendment to the original short sale letter releasing the seller from liability by removing the deficiency language from its approval letter, but then failed to mention this release in a subsequent extension.

The answer? Roll all 3 into January. Get extensions from Bank of America. Yeah, it's a little disappointing for the buyers who had hoped to be in their new homes by New Year's Eve, but it's better this way, most likely, for everybody.

One of my sellers scoffed when I suggested that Bank of America may have given us the extension because it might not realize that SB 931 is going into effect on January 1. But then I received an email this morning from Bank of America that confirmed my suspicions. SB 931 is probably not yet a priority to Bank of America. But it will be.

Some lawyers have argued that SB 931 is unconstitutional and will be challenged. But at the moment, any seller who has only a first mortgage (hard money or purchase money, makes no difference) and who petitions the bank for a short sale in California next month, should fall under the protection of SB 931, if the bank approves the short sale.

2011 will surely be a bumpy ride. Check out my real estate predictions for 2011.

Happy New Year from your Sacramento short sale agent. While everybody else is toasting with champagne to the New Year, I'll be toasting to SB 931.

Photo: Big Stock Photo

sacramento short sale agent

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Elizabeth Weintraub is an author, home buying columnist for The New York Times-owned About.com, a Land Park resident, and a Land Park real estate agent who specializes in older, classic homes in Land Park, Curtis Park, Midtown and East Sacramento. Weintraub is also a Sacramento Short Sale agent who lists and successfully sells short sales throughout Sacramento. Call Elizabeth Weintraub at 916.233.6759. Put 35 years of real estate experience to work for you. Broker-Associate at Lyon Real Estate. DRE License # 00697006.

The Short Sale Savior, by Elizabeth Weintraub, available through bookstores everywhere and at Amazon.com.

Photo: Unless otherwise noted in this blog, the photo is copyrighted by Big Stock Photo and used with permission.

The views expressed herein are Weintraub's personal views and do not reflect the views of Lyon Real Estate.

Disclaimer: If this post contains a listing, information is deemed reliable as of the date it was written. After that date, the listing may be sold, listed by another brokerage, canceled, pending or taken temporarily off the market, and the price could change without notice. It could blow up, explode or vanish. To find out the present status of any listing, please go to elizabethweintraub.com.

 

Comments (1)

Joetta Fort
The DiGiorgio Group - Arvada, CO
Independent Broker, Homes Denver to Boulder

Doing a short sale with a deficiency lingering afterward doesn't give people much motivation to do them at all. I hope this law will help get some things through. Now, if only it had covered the second too ....

Jan 01, 2011 05:18 AM

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