Thursday, November 05, 2015

The Saddest Sentence in the English Language

This is how foreclosure feels. First there’s the dread of the inexorably rising debt as the event draws near. Then your house gets swept away in an impersonal flood of legal procedure. Photo by Carsten Knoche
This post originally appeared on the Hermit Haus blog on 2015-11-04.

Foreclosure is a financial tsunami.  It sweeps away years of good credit practices into a black hole of future agony.  For years, up to a decade, after a foreclosure,  foreclosed persons can’t escape the enormous gravitic pull of the black hole as it stretches pulls, stretches, and tears at them, trying to suck them down into a pit of financial oblivion.

Losing a house to foreclosure is just the start of a decade-long nightmare that makes Freddy Kruger look cuddly.

  • It will be years before they can buy another car or truck, except at a “note lot” that specializes in taking advantage of people with poor credit—often by requiring them to come up with an astronomical down payment that covers the seller’s total investment in the vehicle.
  • They won’t be able to buy another house, and since most apartment communities use credit score to qualify prospective tenants, they may not even be able to get a nice apartment.
  • The foreclosing bank can file a 1099 showing the unpaid balance of the mortgage plus fees and additional interest as income, which causes the IRS to come after them for unpaid taxes on that income.
  • Even in states that don’t allow creditors to garnish wages, the IRS can.

It’s a process that can be avoided. One of our primary goals at Hermit Haus Redevelopment is to help distressed homeowners avoid foreclosure. We have several tools to chip shore up against foreclosure in our tool box (buying the house for cash money is only one of them). And, of course, we make money doing it.  If we didn’t make money, we couldn’t continue to help more people.  And our whole reason for existing is to help as many people as we can.

But people have to let us help.  And that brings us to the saddest sentence in the English language.

Are you ready for it? Here it is:

“No, I trust my bank.”

Carol and I had been working to get a family to allow us to help them avoid a foreclosure.  Last Thursday, the homeowner said, “No, I trust my bank.  They said they would help us with the loan.”  Yesterday, the house sold at foreclosure auction.  The bank’s opening bid was higher than the after repair value of the house.  They really wanted it.

Please don’t trust the bank.  And please don’t let anyone you know suffer through the financial nightmare that is foreclosure.  Call us.  Call our competition!  Please, call someone who can help.

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