Homeowners Foreclose On Bank of America
Call it poetic justice, or even
karma. . .
During the past few years Bank of
America has been at the subject of harsh criticism for business practices that range
from the mean-spirited (such as doubling
credit card interest rates without notice, up to 28% for cardholders in
good standing), to irresponsible (such as foreclosing
on the wrong homes), to even fraudulent (such as the recent robo-signing
scandal involving mortgage documents).
Bank of America is the nation’s largest servicer of mortgage loans, and
the second largest mortgage loan originator. You’d think good record keeping
would be important to such a large company, but apparently mistakes abound at
Bank of America.
Take for example the case
involving Florida couple Warren and Maureen Nyerges. In 2009 the couple moved
from chilly Cleveland, Ohio, to warm Naples, Florida. They purchased a
foreclosed home from Bank of America and paid $165,000 cash. However, in February
16, 2010, Bank of America filed a Complaint to Foreclose
on Mortgage against them, claiming the Nyerges owed almost $141,000 in
unpaid mortgage debt.
Warren Nyerges, 46, a former
sheriff’s deputy in Ohio, spent months trying to dismiss the suit and clear up
Bank of America’s error. In April of 2010, the lawsuit was dropped, and in
December the Nyerges were awarded $2,534 in attorney fees. The bank did not
respond to the repeated requests to pay the court judgment. Warren
called the bank, sent certified letters, called the bank’s attorney, but
nothing worked. Then, in January, he hired an attorney to pursue the case. The
attorney sent letters and made phone call, and still Bank of America failed to respond or pay the judgment.
On June 3, the attorney for the
Nyerges, accompanied by Collier County deputy sheriffs and a moving company,
arrived at a local branch of Bank of America and presented the bank manager
with a writ of execution to seize assets: either pay up or the movers will
start taking things. An hour later checks were cut to satisfy the court
judgment.
This may seem to be an extreme example
of one case that has fallen through the cracks, but the truth is that banks
make errors regularly. In Utah
and Nevada
courts issued foreclosure injunctions against Bank of America for improper
practices. Other banks have also had their share of problem in producing
mortgage documents and verifying that the bank is the rightful holder of the mortgage.
If you are facing foreclosure,
don’t get steamrolled by the bank! You have legal options to negotiate a lower
payment or possibly strip away a junior mortgage. Call today and discover how
the federal and state laws can help you save your home and protect your rights.
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