Legal Question in Real Estate Law in California

i am currently trying to short sale my house before it forecloses. i owe 500,000 on the mortgage and trying to short sale for 260,000. i am married, its my primary residence, its a refinanced loan and i live in california. if it short sales or forecloses, will i have to pay taxes on difference? is bankrupcy a better option? i dont want to have to pay the irs, plus i dont have that kind of money. please help me with any info you can provide.


Asked on 6/09/10, 6:22 am

1 Answer from Attorneys

The tax consequences of foreclosure versus short-sale are essentially the same, unless the lender collects the deficiency after the short sale. If they foreclose through a trustee's sale they would be prohibited from seeking payment of any shortfall. Unless you have consumer debt you can't handle on top of the mortgage, bankruptcy may not do anything for you. The lien on the house survives the bankruptcy. So the lender will still foreclose once the bankruptcy discharge is isssued, or before if they get relief from stay. Fortunately there is a temporary moratorium on collecting the taxes on the deficiency if the bank walks away from it after foreclosure. I'm not sure it applies to short sales. So you should check with an accountant.

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Answered on 6/09/10, 9:46 am


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