I met w/ first attorney yesterday with the intention of looking at CH.7 to wipe out about $87K worth of unsecured debt while still being able to hold onto my house (family of 4). Attorney actually suggested that I look at walking away and foreclosing on the house instead.
I'm currently in a circus loan w/ Countrywide (1st only, no second. Upside down about $60K) that is set to recast in 2/08 and min. payment will jump from $1900 to $3000 which will far exceed my monthly income with other expenses. Attorney recommended waiting for a month or two while still staying current on CC's and mortgage, in addition to bugging the crap out of Countrywide to see if they're willing to renegotiate the loan. If they won't negotiate, he said I should just stop paying for a couple months to get their attention, then see if they'll negotiate. If no, he said we'd then file Ch. 13 and get a broker to do a short sale. If they won't agree to short sale, then I just move out and let them foreclose.
I thought this was an interesting strategy and I left w/o asking all the questions I should have so I was hoping I might get some sage insight here...
If I stop paying mortgage several months prior to filing Ch. 13 do I run the risk of having collections folks calling work, family, etc.?
Reading here, it sounds like going into Ch. 13 behind on mortgage makes in impossible to get the Mort. Co. to agree to short sale. True? Is that bad advice?
What happens to my unsecured CC debt once in 13? Do I go on a payment plan with those? Attorney spoke about the posibility of using 13 as leverage with Mort. Co. to get them to agree to short sale, then once the house is sold, w/ my income I could just come back out of 13, but what about the unsecured debt at that point?
Just wondering if I completely mis-understood the conversation, or if this attorney was nuts, or maybe both. Any input would be appreciated. Thanks in advance. *so confused w/ all this*
I'm currently in a circus loan w/ Countrywide (1st only, no second. Upside down about $60K) that is set to recast in 2/08 and min. payment will jump from $1900 to $3000 which will far exceed my monthly income with other expenses. Attorney recommended waiting for a month or two while still staying current on CC's and mortgage, in addition to bugging the crap out of Countrywide to see if they're willing to renegotiate the loan. If they won't negotiate, he said I should just stop paying for a couple months to get their attention, then see if they'll negotiate. If no, he said we'd then file Ch. 13 and get a broker to do a short sale. If they won't agree to short sale, then I just move out and let them foreclose.
I thought this was an interesting strategy and I left w/o asking all the questions I should have so I was hoping I might get some sage insight here...
If I stop paying mortgage several months prior to filing Ch. 13 do I run the risk of having collections folks calling work, family, etc.?
Reading here, it sounds like going into Ch. 13 behind on mortgage makes in impossible to get the Mort. Co. to agree to short sale. True? Is that bad advice?
What happens to my unsecured CC debt once in 13? Do I go on a payment plan with those? Attorney spoke about the posibility of using 13 as leverage with Mort. Co. to get them to agree to short sale, then once the house is sold, w/ my income I could just come back out of 13, but what about the unsecured debt at that point?
Just wondering if I completely mis-understood the conversation, or if this attorney was nuts, or maybe both. Any input would be appreciated. Thanks in advance. *so confused w/ all this*
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