Hi. Thanks for all the insight on this website. It is really a helpful tool for common folks to learn more about our financial situations and how dire they might be.
My bank is trying to foreclose on my commercial real estate property. Back in 2009, the bank had already put the mortgage under non-accrual (subsequent payments on the loan would be credited to the principal balance). Throughout the years, I've been paying whatever I could every month, even though it's not the original amount on the note ($4k instead of $6k). The bank never objected, and they never modified my loan. They just stopped caring about my loan. I even got a demand letter from the bank saying I owed $439k on principal back in 2010, which matched all the principal balances I had paid to it. Fast forward a couple years and the bank merged with another superbank. When superbank took over, it appeared that they took the back interest from the loan and added it up to the principal that I had been chipping away at. Can the superbank do this? My loan had been in nonaccrual for the past 4 years, with each payment chipping away at the principal. Isn't there some government regulation requiring banks to designate non-accrual loans and keep them in non-accrual unless they show either 1) They paid off the loan in full or 2) They show that they have the ability to do so within a reasonable time frame?
So now superbank is trying to foreclose on me because I stopped monthly payments due to the discrepancy in the principal balance. Could they foreclose if the principal balance that I have is far different than the one they have? (since nonaccrual in 2009, my principal balance is $385,000. The bank now has my principal balance at $486,000). I have all the paperwork that shows my payment records and even when the bank put my loan on nonaccrual. Do any of this help at all?
Thanks for any insight you guys can offer!
My bank is trying to foreclose on my commercial real estate property. Back in 2009, the bank had already put the mortgage under non-accrual (subsequent payments on the loan would be credited to the principal balance). Throughout the years, I've been paying whatever I could every month, even though it's not the original amount on the note ($4k instead of $6k). The bank never objected, and they never modified my loan. They just stopped caring about my loan. I even got a demand letter from the bank saying I owed $439k on principal back in 2010, which matched all the principal balances I had paid to it. Fast forward a couple years and the bank merged with another superbank. When superbank took over, it appeared that they took the back interest from the loan and added it up to the principal that I had been chipping away at. Can the superbank do this? My loan had been in nonaccrual for the past 4 years, with each payment chipping away at the principal. Isn't there some government regulation requiring banks to designate non-accrual loans and keep them in non-accrual unless they show either 1) They paid off the loan in full or 2) They show that they have the ability to do so within a reasonable time frame?
So now superbank is trying to foreclose on me because I stopped monthly payments due to the discrepancy in the principal balance. Could they foreclose if the principal balance that I have is far different than the one they have? (since nonaccrual in 2009, my principal balance is $385,000. The bank now has my principal balance at $486,000). I have all the paperwork that shows my payment records and even when the bank put my loan on nonaccrual. Do any of this help at all?
Thanks for any insight you guys can offer!
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