Legal Question in Real Estate Law in California

who dropped the ball

I tried to refinance my home to stop foreclosure I had $400,00 in equity and was approved for the loan in writing and approved for $27, cash out. All the docs were signed and faxed back to the bank. the notary called and scheduled an appt for tuesday and cancelled resheduled for thursday and no show. My house was foreclosure upon that following Monday. Didn't we have a deal? In the docs I signed over my home as collaltrial for the loan, Didn't they have an obligation to give me the loan? I did everything on time and Title was opened and so was escrow.


Asked on 5/23/08, 7:27 am

2 Answers from Attorneys

Michael Stone Law Offices of Michael B. Stone Toll Free 1-855-USE-MIKE

Re: who dropped the ball

Why on earth didn't you consult a lawyer to stop the foreclosure before now????!!!! Stopping a foreclosure would have been easy and cheap, at least before the fact. Run walk or crawl to a bankruptcy lawyer and see if maybe there is something that can be done for you -- but I am not optimistic.

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Answered on 5/23/08, 10:50 am
Bryan Whipple Bryan R. R. Whipple, Attorney at Law

Re: who dropped the ball

Whether the refinance lender had an obligation to fund the loan is doubtful. So-called approvals and commitments made by lenders are full of conditions, including ones the borrower may have no control over, such as a satisfactory title report, market conditions, etc.

My advice at this point would be to have a lawyer examine anything you were given by the proposed lender that your think showed a commitment to lend. I'll bet there isn't any. "Approval" often means nothing more than "so far, so good" and/or "we're willing to take the next steps with you." You have to read every word of approvals and commitment letters.

Banks win 99% of suits over the failure-to-loan issue, but that's not 100%. There is some faint hope that you had an enforceable commitment, the breach of which gives you a cause of action for resulting damages.

There is also a possibility of a fraudulent collusion between the foreclosing lender and someone (?) to string you along so the foreclosing lender could get the property without a last-minute redemption. This is a very remote possibility, but I guess worth mentioning.

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Answered on 5/23/08, 12:01 pm


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