Epic Fail
Diamond Member
Get a brain...
I must not get it as I have been away for over a week celebrating Mardi Gras in parts of Louisiana ending with New Orleans for Tuesday fun.
i don't understand how they can refuse the amount owed on their note, more even, and then take the house to sell for a larger profit
that seems like theft to me, how is that legal?
Guys, read the article. It doesn't sound like he had any trouble paying his mortgage, the bank seized the home because of the money he owed due to being sued regarding his business.
I'd have done the same thing. The bank got greedy. Some offered the bank MORE than he had left on his home, and they refused citing the fact that they could make more if they foreclosed it.
Haha. I say good on him. At least he sticks to his principles.
"Well, to probably make banks think twice before they try to take someone's home, and if they are going to take it wrongly, the end result will be them tearing their house down like I did mine," Hoskins said.
No you moron. I am not one to ever side with the banks, but you are a moron. And I hope the bank sues you. I am sure somewhere in the mortgage agreement YOU SIGNED it prohibits you from demolishing the house because then you would be destroying the asset you have for the mortgage.
Doesn't chapter 7 protect him?
Awesome! Unless there's some fine print somewhere, I can't see how this is illegal either. He does own the house. if I want to, I can tear down my house and rebuild it, or do something else with the land. I still have to pay the mortgage, but if the bank is taking it away from me, then they have to try to sell a 300k piece of rubble.
Hilarious. Given his side of the story I am on his side. IF he had the money to pay then the bank has no reason to try to foreclose his house.
Doesn't chapter 7 protect him?
bankruptcy doesn't eliminate secured debt, unless you're GM's bondholders.
Hoskins' business in Amelia is scheduled to go up for auction on March 2, and he told Fuller he's considering leveling that building, too
There's plenty of reason they can foreclose. If the judge was letting it go through they had reason.
I highly doubt a bank will allow him to dismiss the deficiency judgement the bank will inevitably get. The moron will be paying them back the rest of his life.
What's sad is that this "faceless" bank has its own creditors, who he just fucked because he couldn't pay for his obligations.
There was once upon a time that real men honored their contracts. Now whiny bitches rule this country.
I read the article, and it appears that the home was collateral on a loan he had for his business. They foreclosed because of that loan. He offered to cover the mortgage + $10k, which probably wouldn't put a dent in the business loan.
If the house was truly worth $350k and he had someone who was going to pay $170k for it, he was probably trying to do something shady to get the house extricated from the business loan. Why WOULD the bank take less when they could get more and they were owed more? Why SHOULD they? If they recovered more than they were owed he would have gotten the difference - they were just looking to break even.
Unfortunately this guy's trouble will probably end with bankruptcy. He really deserves much worse.
That's pretty sad really. Shows this world is run by lawyers. :/
I have a feeling he will lose at the end, but I really hope he wins, and that this screws over the bank big time.
The money's pretty useless to the bank if it's in his possession though.Awesome! Unless there's some fine print somewhere, I can't see how this is illegal either. He does own the house. if I want to, I can tear down my house and rebuild it, or do something else with the land. I still have to pay the mortgage, but if the bank is taking it away from me, then they have to try to sell a 300k piece of rubble.
Hilarious. Given his side of the story I am on his side. IF he had the money to pay then the bank has no reason to try to foreclose his house.
Who do you think the bank is?
As I said before, contracts used to be settled by handshakes, without lawyers. What's really sad is that he couldn't be true enough to himself to honor is contract.
Liars and deadbeat debtors shouldn't be revered.
I know it's all cool and stuff to be a populist doof. However, this costs people real money. A bank is owned by other people, often times, small investors. This costs them money, all because this guy was a loser.
Gotta love internet anarchists.
I can't believe anyone would condone this douchebags actions. Remind me not to loan you money.
Most people like the idea of "sticking it to the man", and will happily do so.
Would be an interesting psychological study, actually.