I'm still in the house, and the foreclosure auction was Nov. 18th, with no bidders/buyers. Obviously I'm in the process of packing/moving (everything got backup due to not getting paid for 2 months, finally got one month's pay on Nov. 17th).
On Nov. 22 a man taped a notice to my door, to determine the occupancy status of the property. We talked for a bit (thankfully he was a nice guy) and he said to call the agent listed on the notice for more information on the cash for keys offer, that it would probably be between $2-3k. Since I have $300 to my name and no where to move to, that would make quite a difference right now. I've heard of other CFK amounts being right about the same.
I talked to the agent today, and she said the lender (EMC) offered CFK of $1,250, and I would need to be out in 14 days (we agreed on Dec. 12th, which is actually a little more).
The CFK was considerably less than I'd hoped for, but I'm not arguing/questioning that. The little over 2 weeks time to vacate sucks also. Everything seems standard (free of debris and broom-swept, no appliances removed, etc).
What I am questioning...the agreement requires that:
Occupant provide proof that all utilities are paid through the surrender date.
Is this standard? Since the utilities are all in my name, I'm not sure why it would matter to them if they are paid or not.
I'm several months behind on the utilities. Telephone: $95, PG&E $75, and Electric is $300. I'm on a monthly payment plan for the electric (it was $400 and they divided it into 4 monthly payments over 4 months, I've paid one month). That doesn't include current charges on all.
Which means utilities are / will be roughly $600. Dumpster rental will be about $200. I'd be paying out $800 (theoretically, because I don't have that), to get back $1,250...leaving a net of $450.
I'm not asking anyone to make this decision for me, I'm just asking if it's typical and standard for them to require all utilities be current and paid. I really wasn't expecting that. I haven't filed BK yet, but plan to, and will likely include utilities in with it.
In my county, when the sheriff processes an eviction it takes 5 days (from the time the sheriff's office gets the paperwork). I'm not sure how long it takes for the paperwork to get to them, but it seems if the lender wants to go that route...they wouldn't be getting me out any sooner, and they'd have one heck of a big clean up to deal with.
It would almost be worth it just to take what I want to keep and walk away. If you saw this place...you'd understand.
On Nov. 22 a man taped a notice to my door, to determine the occupancy status of the property. We talked for a bit (thankfully he was a nice guy) and he said to call the agent listed on the notice for more information on the cash for keys offer, that it would probably be between $2-3k. Since I have $300 to my name and no where to move to, that would make quite a difference right now. I've heard of other CFK amounts being right about the same.
I talked to the agent today, and she said the lender (EMC) offered CFK of $1,250, and I would need to be out in 14 days (we agreed on Dec. 12th, which is actually a little more).
The CFK was considerably less than I'd hoped for, but I'm not arguing/questioning that. The little over 2 weeks time to vacate sucks also. Everything seems standard (free of debris and broom-swept, no appliances removed, etc).
What I am questioning...the agreement requires that:
Occupant provide proof that all utilities are paid through the surrender date.
Is this standard? Since the utilities are all in my name, I'm not sure why it would matter to them if they are paid or not.
I'm several months behind on the utilities. Telephone: $95, PG&E $75, and Electric is $300. I'm on a monthly payment plan for the electric (it was $400 and they divided it into 4 monthly payments over 4 months, I've paid one month). That doesn't include current charges on all.
Which means utilities are / will be roughly $600. Dumpster rental will be about $200. I'd be paying out $800 (theoretically, because I don't have that), to get back $1,250...leaving a net of $450.
I'm not asking anyone to make this decision for me, I'm just asking if it's typical and standard for them to require all utilities be current and paid. I really wasn't expecting that. I haven't filed BK yet, but plan to, and will likely include utilities in with it.
In my county, when the sheriff processes an eviction it takes 5 days (from the time the sheriff's office gets the paperwork). I'm not sure how long it takes for the paperwork to get to them, but it seems if the lender wants to go that route...they wouldn't be getting me out any sooner, and they'd have one heck of a big clean up to deal with.
It would almost be worth it just to take what I want to keep and walk away. If you saw this place...you'd understand.
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