Protecting Your House - Massachusetts
Below we have provided answers to many of the common questions that we are asked by our clients regarding protecting their house and dealing with mortgage debt. If you would like more information please do not hesitate to call us at 508.655.5980 or e-mail us.
How can filing bankruptcy help protect my house?
You can protect a portion of the equity in your home by recording a Declaration of Homestead prior to filing for Bankruptcy. You should consult with an attorney regarding the preparation and filing of a Declaration of Homestead. If you are unable to afford an attorney, the Registry of Deeds for your county likely has a standard form Declaration of Homestead which you can prepare yourself.In addition, filing bankruptcy causes an automatic stay to go into effect, which immediately stops all actions against the debtor. This includes foreclosures. Since there are numerous consequences to filing for Bankruptcy and limits to how filing will provide protection, you should consult with an attorney for further information.
Will filing for bankruptcy ensure that I can keep my house?
If you cannot afford to pay your mortgage on an ongoing basis then the mortgage company will likely be able to obtain Relief from the Automatic Stay and foreclose anyway. Although filing for Chapter 13 can provide you with time to pay any mortgage arrears, in order to keep your home you will have to be able to make the ongoing payments.What do I do if I have negative equity in my house?
Many homeowners today have negative equity in their homes, that is, they owe more on the mortgage than their homes is worth. This may be due to any number of factors, most commonly resulting from a combination of purchasing the property during the "housing bubble" of the early to mid 2000's, jumbo mortgages which finance 90% or more of the purchase price, and the use of "home equity loans" to fund consumer expenses. If you are current with your mortgage payments and plan to stay in your home, the "solution" to this problem is to basically wait out the market until home prices rise again or you have paid off enough principal of the mortgage to create positive equity in the property.What do I do if I can no longer afford my house?
Homeowners encounter serious problems when they cannot pay (and have not paid) the mortgage and they have negative equity in the property. Perhaps the homeowner took on a mortgage payment that they could not afford - i.e., purchased "too much house" - or some other temporary situation has impacted the homeowner's finances such as an unexpected medical expense, loss of a job or other significant interruption in income. In any case, the bank may be threatening foreclosure, the homeowner is in jeopardy of loosing their home, and the value of the property at foreclosure auction is not enough to pay off the balance of the mortgage, resulting in an individual liability by the former homeowner to the bank for tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of dollars.At this point, homeowners weigh their options and understand that they can no longer afford to keep the house. They can't afford the payments, and realize it is a losing proposition to struggle to pay into a property that has negative net value. Assume for this scenario that the debtor's financial situation does not permit a mortgage modification. Perhaps the mortgage has already been modified; the borrower does not qualify for a modification; a modification has been denied; or the borrower's income is insufficient to to continue to make any payments, due to job loss or medical illness. After conducting some research, the homeowner is now weighting two options: A Short Sale of the property and/or Bankruptcy.
What is a Short Sale? Is it right for me?
In a short sale, the bank or mortgage lender agrees to discount a loan balance because of an economic or financial hardship on the part of the borrower. The home owner/debtor sells the mortgaged property for less than the outstanding balance of the loan, and turns over the proceeds of the sale to the lender. Borrowers are able to mitigate damage to their credit history, and partially control the debt. It does not extinguish the remaining balance unless settlement is clearly indicated on the acceptance of offer. The borrower must work directly with the lender to seek approval of the short sale by the bank, obtain a purchaser, and complete the transaction before any foreclosure proceedings are completed. (In some cases, the bank may have initiated foreclosure proceedings, in addition to contemplating consent for the short sale.) Timing is critically important, and the debtor is an important part of the short sale process.Short sales are a type of settlement, and they adversely affect a person's credit report, though the negative impact may be less than a foreclosure. Depending upon other credit information, it may possible to obtain another mortgage 1-3 years after a short sale, or even sooner if the borrower is current at the time of the sale.
However, if the individual does not then pay off the deficient portion of the mortgage (the unpaid portion of the mortgage after the short sale proceeds were applied to the balance), the lender can take further legal action against the debtor to collect the unpaid portion of the mortgage, which may include trustee process attachments, garnishments, or seizure of other assets, depending on the debtor's other property. The debtor may, after the short sale is complete, file for Bankruptcy upon completion of the short sale to discharge any deficiency and extinguish any further liability to the lender.
In this scenario, a foreclosure will never appear on the debtor's credit report. Although the Bankruptcy and Short Sale will appear on the debtor's credit report, some members of the mortgage lending agency will extend first mortgage financing, and even sub-prime mortgage financing, to prospective borrower with a bankruptcy that did not involve mortgage debt in as little as 3-4 years after the bankruptcy, provided the debtor has reestablished credit and used it responsibly during that time. Even if the bankruptcy included a small portion of mortgage deficiency debt, the fact that it did not include a foreclosure action will result in the debtor's credit healing much more quickly than if the debtor also went through a foreclosure during or before bankruptcy.
What if I can't afford or sell my House?
A final option is to simply file for bankruptcy, and indicate that the debtor's intention is to surrender the property to the bank. Procedurally, the Bankruptcy case will progress through the Bankruptcy Court, and eventually the secured lender will seek permission from the Bankruptcy Court to be relieved of the automatic stay protections, and begin foreclosure proceedings. Regardless of whether the foreclosure auction is completed by the bank before or after the debtor's discharge (meaning they no longer owe certain debts, including the mortgage debt), any deficiency from the foreclosure auction is discharged by the bankruptcy court. From the debtor's perspective, the whole process is completed through the bankruptcy, and does not require any specific participation directly with the lender.This option provides a swift resolution to the issue of past-due mortgage debt, the pending foreclosure on the property, and any mortgage deficiency all in one process that, in the case of a Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, can be completed from filing to discharge in under six months. It is best utilized when the lender will not agree to a short sale, when there is insufficient time to arrange a short sale, or when the debtor's other financial concerns (such as collection actions on other debt) require immediate action. It also does not require the lender's permission or cooperation - provided you qualify for bankruptcy, the Bankruptcy Laws dictate the result, not the lender's business decision.
The credit implications of a foreclosure and bankruptcy (or in the context of bankruptcy) are more detrimental than a short sale followed by bankruptcy, if the debtor wants to obtain a mortgage again in the future. Following a foreclosure, the debtor will have great difficulty in obtaining a future mortgage for the 10-year period that the foreclosure will remain on the debtor's credit report for mortgage and employment purposes. The foreclosure will not appear on the debtor's consumer credit report for 7 years following the foreclosure, meaning credit cards and car loans may be more easily attainable at that point.
Click here to learn more about the costs of bankruptcy.
Tel.508.655.5980 • Tel.508.720.0397 • Fax.508.655.5981












