We are probably end up walking away from our home post CH7 discharge. Unless I can get an attorney who has worked with my bank who can guarantee that we'll get a loan mod (I've been hearing a million reasons why they won't-we have PMI, etc...), I think we'll want to get out sooner rather than later after discharge so we can get a jump on starting over. I guess it sounds like a pretty basic question, but when you "walk away" do you just shut the utilities off, pull the moving van up, load it, and leave? Should we let the bank know? What about our homeowner's insurance? We're planning on stopping paying the mortgage and letting the bank foreclose-that way we can have a place to live while banking the payments and looking for a place to rent in the meantime, so they will see it coming.
My main concern is whether or not I could be held liable if, say, we ended up having to leave in the middle of winter and the electricity gets shut off-no electricity = no oil burner, no oil burner = no heat, which could possibly mean a frozen/burst pipe. Can they come after me for that? How about if neighborhood kids break in and start destroying things? This actually happened on the other side of our development last year-a foreclosed home had become a teen party hangout until the police got involved.
Finally, our house is pretty simple (1960s era two bedroom ranch) and we haven't really made that many improvements, but one major one was the installation of a wood burning furnace. It did not come with the home and I had planned on taking it with us-we probably won't use it wherever we rent, but my father can store it in his barn until we buy something. I'll patch the hole where it connected to the ductwork in the house as well as where the chimney exited the wall, and the regular oil heat will function as normal when we leave. The bank doesn't even know about it-only my insurance company and the town do because I had to pull permits and get a fire/insurance inspection for it. Obviously someone from the bank will inspect the home and it will be evident where the furnace was-will they hassle me over that?
I'm sorry if these seem like silly questions, but in essence I want to be sure that once we're discharged and we leave this home, that we're truly getting a fresh start and that nothing from the past will come back to haunt us. Our plan is to rent for three or four years until the BK/foreclosure becomes less of a factor on our credit report and to live as simply and frugally as possible so that we'll always have an emergency fund to fall back one once we do purchase another home.
My main concern is whether or not I could be held liable if, say, we ended up having to leave in the middle of winter and the electricity gets shut off-no electricity = no oil burner, no oil burner = no heat, which could possibly mean a frozen/burst pipe. Can they come after me for that? How about if neighborhood kids break in and start destroying things? This actually happened on the other side of our development last year-a foreclosed home had become a teen party hangout until the police got involved.
Finally, our house is pretty simple (1960s era two bedroom ranch) and we haven't really made that many improvements, but one major one was the installation of a wood burning furnace. It did not come with the home and I had planned on taking it with us-we probably won't use it wherever we rent, but my father can store it in his barn until we buy something. I'll patch the hole where it connected to the ductwork in the house as well as where the chimney exited the wall, and the regular oil heat will function as normal when we leave. The bank doesn't even know about it-only my insurance company and the town do because I had to pull permits and get a fire/insurance inspection for it. Obviously someone from the bank will inspect the home and it will be evident where the furnace was-will they hassle me over that?
I'm sorry if these seem like silly questions, but in essence I want to be sure that once we're discharged and we leave this home, that we're truly getting a fresh start and that nothing from the past will come back to haunt us. Our plan is to rent for three or four years until the BK/foreclosure becomes less of a factor on our credit report and to live as simply and frugally as possible so that we'll always have an emergency fund to fall back one once we do purchase another home.
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