First off, a little disclaimer: I have no idea how I could apparently have had such a monumental level of stupidity, complete lack of legal (good) advice and total "head in the sand" attitude. My only defense being relative youth and the trying emotional situation I was going through at the time.
I filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy on September 26, 1996 -- yes, nearly fourteen years ago -- due to a pile of debt and the fallout of a not-so-great marriage. I opted to reaffirm both a vehicle loan that my grandfather had co-signed and my one year old mortgage. I believed that the bank would come after my grandfather if I discharged the car loan and I truly felt that the only way to keep my home was through the reaffirmation process. A note on the home: It was a trailer (oops, mobile home) on a rented lot in a park. The note was at a high interest rate. The home was upside down. As a single parent I could barely afford the payments. Did I mention the rented lot that was nearly as much as the mortgage ? I had no idea such a thing as "ride-through" even existed.
In any event, the reaffirmation agreements were drawn up and I signed them and the lawyer forwarded them along to the lenders on November 20, 1996. Ford Motor Credit signed the vehicle reaff and filed it on December 20, 1996. GreenTree, the mortgage company, did not file the mortgage reaffirmation agreement until February 3, 1997. The February filing ended up being nearly three weeks after the discharge. Timeline as follows...
09/26/1996 Bankruptcy Filed/Petitioned
09/30/1996 Notice of 341 Meeting
11/14/1996 Final Report of Trustees
12/19/1996 Ford Motor Company Reaffirmation Filed
01/16/1997 Discharge of Debtor
02/03/1997 GreenTree Reaffirmation Filed
Of course, I was blissfully unaware of any of this and went along my merry way believing that a reaffirmation exactly matching my current mortgage/payment schedule was in place. I struggled for nearly ten years making the mortgage payment, received the normal monthly "bill" from GreenTree, had on-line account/billing and, when I was late (which was more often than not), TONS of phone calls, late fees and, at one point, even a "server" showing up at my door to collect my payment. After even one day late, GreenTree would call up to half a dozen times a day, every day, until the payment was "caught up".
Sometime during the tenth year, and shortly before I bought a new home and had to convert the 'ole trailer to a rental as it was so upside down it was unsellable, I received a call from a GreenTree rep asking what my intent was with the property. I stated that it was my primary residence and didn't think anything about it. This type of phone call kept reoccuring and I finally questioned the agent as to why they were inquiring about this. He stated that the home had been included in a bankrupcty with no reaffirmation and I was "squatting" so they were trying to determine whether to take the property back.
Needless to say, I was very surprised (and, not ashamed to say, somewhat elated). I contacted a "general" lawyer to inquire into my legal rights. The lawyer took a retainer and contacted GreenTree. GreenTree supposedly acknowledged their mistake and told him they would file the reaffirmation -- ten years after the discharge. GreenTree even offered to make sure all my payments were correctly reported to the credit bureaus. Not knowing any better, I took my new lawyer's and GreenTree's word and grudgingly let it go.
Fast forward another three years and some research courtesy of the lawyer known as Mr. Google and I came to the belief, biased in my own favor, that a reaffirmation agreement had to be filed before the date of discharge or within the 90/60 day windows of the 341 meetings. GreenTree's file dates didn't meet any of these litmus tests.
I retained yet another attorney (bankruptcy this time) to verify my findings and he has not been, to this date, a fountain of information. He will not definitively state what the true deadlines of filing a reaff are nor what my "rights" should be. He was able to obtain a copy of the original reaffirmation agreement and bankruptcy filing. The lawyer's only advice at this point is to stop paying and "see what they do".
Reading the original reaffirmation agreement was a complete eye-opener (refer to my opening paragraph about stupidity). The reaffirmation agreement was for the remaining owed amount on the mobile home paid in installments of $119/month... much less than the $460 a month I was billed for and paid for the last fourteen years. In fact, the address of the property listed on the reaffirmation agreement does not remotely match my property nor does the property description. GreenTree never even provided a copy with their signature to my original bankruptcy lawyer. Over the course of the fourteen years since the bankruptcy, I have paid much more than the total owed as outlined the reaff. I know...read and know what you're signing.
Currently, I am renting the property for $200 less than the combined mortgage/lot rent. Nothing like bleeding red every month. I am fourteen days late on the most recent payment (and have received upwards of fifty calls).
Here are my questions to this community:
1. Is a reaffirmation agreement filed after the discharge date valid ?
2. If a reaffirmation is NOT valid and a lender continues to collect the debt (including billing statement, phone calls, on-line billing, late fees, physical collection) what are someone's rights under the law ?
3. If a reaffirmation IS valid, can a lender then ignore it and attempt to collect more money by the above methods (billing, calls, etc...) ?
Yes...as ignoble as it is... I want to walk away from this property. Being somewhat vindicative (as far as GreenTree is concerned at least), I would not mind finding out that GreenTree violated a ton of laws in regards to this reaff over the years.
Thanks in advance for any advice!
I filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy on September 26, 1996 -- yes, nearly fourteen years ago -- due to a pile of debt and the fallout of a not-so-great marriage. I opted to reaffirm both a vehicle loan that my grandfather had co-signed and my one year old mortgage. I believed that the bank would come after my grandfather if I discharged the car loan and I truly felt that the only way to keep my home was through the reaffirmation process. A note on the home: It was a trailer (oops, mobile home) on a rented lot in a park. The note was at a high interest rate. The home was upside down. As a single parent I could barely afford the payments. Did I mention the rented lot that was nearly as much as the mortgage ? I had no idea such a thing as "ride-through" even existed.
In any event, the reaffirmation agreements were drawn up and I signed them and the lawyer forwarded them along to the lenders on November 20, 1996. Ford Motor Credit signed the vehicle reaff and filed it on December 20, 1996. GreenTree, the mortgage company, did not file the mortgage reaffirmation agreement until February 3, 1997. The February filing ended up being nearly three weeks after the discharge. Timeline as follows...
09/26/1996 Bankruptcy Filed/Petitioned
09/30/1996 Notice of 341 Meeting
11/14/1996 Final Report of Trustees
12/19/1996 Ford Motor Company Reaffirmation Filed
01/16/1997 Discharge of Debtor
02/03/1997 GreenTree Reaffirmation Filed
Of course, I was blissfully unaware of any of this and went along my merry way believing that a reaffirmation exactly matching my current mortgage/payment schedule was in place. I struggled for nearly ten years making the mortgage payment, received the normal monthly "bill" from GreenTree, had on-line account/billing and, when I was late (which was more often than not), TONS of phone calls, late fees and, at one point, even a "server" showing up at my door to collect my payment. After even one day late, GreenTree would call up to half a dozen times a day, every day, until the payment was "caught up".
Sometime during the tenth year, and shortly before I bought a new home and had to convert the 'ole trailer to a rental as it was so upside down it was unsellable, I received a call from a GreenTree rep asking what my intent was with the property. I stated that it was my primary residence and didn't think anything about it. This type of phone call kept reoccuring and I finally questioned the agent as to why they were inquiring about this. He stated that the home had been included in a bankrupcty with no reaffirmation and I was "squatting" so they were trying to determine whether to take the property back.
Needless to say, I was very surprised (and, not ashamed to say, somewhat elated). I contacted a "general" lawyer to inquire into my legal rights. The lawyer took a retainer and contacted GreenTree. GreenTree supposedly acknowledged their mistake and told him they would file the reaffirmation -- ten years after the discharge. GreenTree even offered to make sure all my payments were correctly reported to the credit bureaus. Not knowing any better, I took my new lawyer's and GreenTree's word and grudgingly let it go.
Fast forward another three years and some research courtesy of the lawyer known as Mr. Google and I came to the belief, biased in my own favor, that a reaffirmation agreement had to be filed before the date of discharge or within the 90/60 day windows of the 341 meetings. GreenTree's file dates didn't meet any of these litmus tests.
I retained yet another attorney (bankruptcy this time) to verify my findings and he has not been, to this date, a fountain of information. He will not definitively state what the true deadlines of filing a reaff are nor what my "rights" should be. He was able to obtain a copy of the original reaffirmation agreement and bankruptcy filing. The lawyer's only advice at this point is to stop paying and "see what they do".
Reading the original reaffirmation agreement was a complete eye-opener (refer to my opening paragraph about stupidity). The reaffirmation agreement was for the remaining owed amount on the mobile home paid in installments of $119/month... much less than the $460 a month I was billed for and paid for the last fourteen years. In fact, the address of the property listed on the reaffirmation agreement does not remotely match my property nor does the property description. GreenTree never even provided a copy with their signature to my original bankruptcy lawyer. Over the course of the fourteen years since the bankruptcy, I have paid much more than the total owed as outlined the reaff. I know...read and know what you're signing.
Currently, I am renting the property for $200 less than the combined mortgage/lot rent. Nothing like bleeding red every month. I am fourteen days late on the most recent payment (and have received upwards of fifty calls).
Here are my questions to this community:
1. Is a reaffirmation agreement filed after the discharge date valid ?
2. If a reaffirmation is NOT valid and a lender continues to collect the debt (including billing statement, phone calls, on-line billing, late fees, physical collection) what are someone's rights under the law ?
3. If a reaffirmation IS valid, can a lender then ignore it and attempt to collect more money by the above methods (billing, calls, etc...) ?
Yes...as ignoble as it is... I want to walk away from this property. Being somewhat vindicative (as far as GreenTree is concerned at least), I would not mind finding out that GreenTree violated a ton of laws in regards to this reaff over the years.
Thanks in advance for any advice!
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