Livingdream,
I am the original poster of the thread that you were directed to. As it relates to your home, the bk Code does not require you to act on your intention to keep the home by signing a reaffirmation agreement. If you remain current on the mortgage you can keep the home and all the advantages that go along with it such as building equity and taking a tax deduction for interest. The only thing you lose, as far as I can tell, is the lender potentially reporting your payments on your credit report.
However, if you take the extra step and officially reaffirm, the possibility that payments will be reported is not the only thing that can happen. Florida, if I am not mistaken DOES NOT have an anti deficiency statute. If you officially reaffirm you are re-obligating yourself to the loan. You are removing the protection of the bk discharge. If you default, the lender will foreclose and have the added benefit of a right to sue you for whatever it does not recover from the foreclosure.
You say now that you can handle the payment. That is fine. But, like the person from Michigan who prompted me to begin the thread about why reaffirming is a bad idea, you may find out the hard way that re-obligating yourself to the loan was a big mistake.
You simply need to weigh the risks and the benefits. My job, as an attny, is to try to protect my client from future risk and, even though I live in a State with an anti deficiency statue, to this day I tell my clients “do not reaffirm”, just “stay and pay”. Your attny sees things differently and that is fine. You will eventually do what you feel comfortable with.
Now, the vehicle is a different beast. The Code requires you to act on your intention as it relates to such items. Certain jurisdictions have found ways around the requirement to reaffirm, including mine. I do not know if the Judges in Florida have jumped on the “reaffirming is a no-no as long as you are current” bandwagon. If they haven’t there may be no way to protect yourself from the trap that Congress and the credit industry created.
Des.
I am the original poster of the thread that you were directed to. As it relates to your home, the bk Code does not require you to act on your intention to keep the home by signing a reaffirmation agreement. If you remain current on the mortgage you can keep the home and all the advantages that go along with it such as building equity and taking a tax deduction for interest. The only thing you lose, as far as I can tell, is the lender potentially reporting your payments on your credit report.
However, if you take the extra step and officially reaffirm, the possibility that payments will be reported is not the only thing that can happen. Florida, if I am not mistaken DOES NOT have an anti deficiency statute. If you officially reaffirm you are re-obligating yourself to the loan. You are removing the protection of the bk discharge. If you default, the lender will foreclose and have the added benefit of a right to sue you for whatever it does not recover from the foreclosure.
You say now that you can handle the payment. That is fine. But, like the person from Michigan who prompted me to begin the thread about why reaffirming is a bad idea, you may find out the hard way that re-obligating yourself to the loan was a big mistake.
You simply need to weigh the risks and the benefits. My job, as an attny, is to try to protect my client from future risk and, even though I live in a State with an anti deficiency statue, to this day I tell my clients “do not reaffirm”, just “stay and pay”. Your attny sees things differently and that is fine. You will eventually do what you feel comfortable with.
Now, the vehicle is a different beast. The Code requires you to act on your intention as it relates to such items. Certain jurisdictions have found ways around the requirement to reaffirm, including mine. I do not know if the Judges in Florida have jumped on the “reaffirming is a no-no as long as you are current” bandwagon. If they haven’t there may be no way to protect yourself from the trap that Congress and the credit industry created.
Des.
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