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California Foreclosure Laws Article
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Where to Look for a Free Foreclosure Listing
from:If you are looking to buy a new home at a great deal and at the same time get a free foreclosure listing you can do it. There is an abundance of foreclosure property up for sale. If you choose to help out another human being while you make sure you save on the purchases of your own home, you can do so by looking into a pre foreclosure sale. Homeowners who go into pre foreclosure are unable to make the payment or meet the taxes on their homes any longer. These people are ordinary people like you and I who have fallen upon hard times. Perhaps they have lost their jobs, or have experienced a death in the family of the main breadwinner, or second income earner. Either way you will help them as they help you when you choose your free foreclosure listing from them.
Getting a free foreclosure listing may be as easy as opening up the newspaper and reading the ads. You benefit from the free foreclosure listing as you do not have to pay for it. It is the homeowners going into pre foreclosure’s responsibility to pay for advertising costs. They will pay for their own pre foreclosure listing in the newspaper. Homeowners are willing to pay for the listing and sell their homes before the bank repossesses the home. By doing so they will rid themselves from under their financial burden and save their credit rating in the process.
When a legal suit is taken against a homeowner in regards to an unpaid mortgage, legal term for this action is a Lis Pendens. Since this is a legal notification, it will be filed with the City or County courthouse. Checking the court records is another way of finding pre foreclosure listings. Though the listing on file may not turn out to be a free foreclosure listing as such, it is a good idea to see if there is a suitable pre foreclosure listing in your immediate area before widening your search.
You will need to get information on both pre foreclosure and foreclosure information from you state if you intend to purchase foreclosure property. For example purchasing a property after it has gone in the pre foreclosure stage must be done between 90 and 120 days depending upon the state. Otherwise the lending institution will then repossess it. Also, you will need to make sure that the state does not have a right of redemption clause whereby the owner can redeem the property if he/she can come up with the amount in default.
You can always find a free foreclosure listing on the web as well. There are several databases containing free listings that can cater to your business needs.
California Foreclosure Laws News
Foreclosure-prevention efforts face obstacles in Sacramento
A legislative panel called to rescue two stalled foreclosure-prevention bills is bogged down, and Gov. Jerry Brown wants to use part of California's share of the national mortgage settlement to trim the state's budget deficit. SACRAMENTO — Efforts to ease California's foreclosure woes, among the worst in the nation, are running into roadblocks at the state Capitol.
Read more...Regulator balks at California foreclosure fixes
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The housing regulator for mortgage-giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on Tuesday said laws under consideration in California to halt illegal foreclosures could restrict mortgage credit and hamper necessary home seizures. In a letter to California legislators, the Federal Housing Finance Agency disclosed concerns with a measure to increase civil penalties for so-called ...
Read more...Lawyers prey on foreclosure-facing homeowners in San Fernando Valley and beyond
Paulette Breen sensed something was wrong when her home loan modification made her mortgage payments more expensive. Suspecting fraud, the Van Nuys resident hired a lawyer to sort things out. That only made things worse.
Read more...‘HOMEOWNER BILL OF RIGHTS’ MOVING ALONG IN SACRAMENTO
A set of proposed laws that aim to protect California homeowners from foreclosure abuses is working its way through the Legislature.
Read more...California bankers say mortgage proposals too strict
Banking executives warned California legislators Tuesday that some provisions of a proposed "Homeowners Bill of Rights" may create a wave of frivolous lawsuits and slow the recovery of the state's housing market.
Read more...


