10/9/2008 1:18:11 PM
good man. People who are paying their bills and living up to their end of their legal contracts shouldn't be forced from their homes.
10/9/2008 1:20:29 PM
I started wondering last year if this was going to be a problem. Imagine if you were an overextended landlord who knew you were on track to lose all of your ten or more properties. You would probably stop paying anything on all of them at once, no mortgage payments, no property taxes, nothing. The rent checks would still be coming in from the tenants though. Foreclosures take at minimum like six months but usually way longer, you could pocket rent money without making payments for a long time before anything actually went through. Since none of your mail or notices go to the properties, the people who were renting might not actually know what is going on until the cops are pounding on the door to throw them out. Potentially a slimeball landlord could pocket tens of thousands in rent during the interim and the tenants would get thrown out with no notice. It is pretty screwed up if you think about it. The renting families get the biggest financial clusterfuck of their lives, and the landlord has their money to do what he wants with and at the end of it all declare bankruptcy.
10/9/2008 1:33:44 PM
10/9/2008 1:44:04 PM
They're theirs in the sense that they are fulfilling every legal obligation they have in order to live there. Violation of the contract happened by someone else.[Edited on October 9, 2008 at 1:49 PM. Reason : more convoluted.]
10/9/2008 1:49:04 PM
yeah but since they are a second-tier contract the primary contract is enforced first. like I said, dicey. its not their fault. I would think that the bank would be able to work something out with them to essentially start paying rent to the bank itself.
10/9/2008 1:55:27 PM
I think in many of these situations, it could be structured so that the rent payment becomes a mortgage payment and everyone wins.
10/9/2008 1:56:42 PM
I was reading about this a couple of days ago--it's a shitty situation all around. The article (can't remember where I read or else I'd post it) had interviews with sheriffs who'd evicted people who, quite literally, had no idea before the sheriffs knocked on the door that they were in danger of eviction. Tenants of deadbeat landlords should be allotted at least some amount of time, certainly no less than 30 days, to move their belongings and find other accommodations once they have been notified that the building is in foreclosure. A simple fix to this is to require landlords to notify tenants when foreclosures are underway. Anything less is wholly unfair.
10/9/2008 1:57:07 PM
10/9/2008 2:00:05 PM
no i didnt read the article but i know of these situations.
10/9/2008 2:03:01 PM
I wish the police worried as much about making sure they were going after the right people during their many botched drug raids. And where was all the concern during the Kelo decision which gave gov't the right to kick you out of your home if Walmart wanted the land?And any concern for property owners whose land is basically usurped by the EPA for all sorts of ridiculous reasons such as calling a water puddle in your backyard a "wetlands"?
10/9/2008 8:02:33 PM
^ So is this a good move in your opinion or not?
10/9/2008 8:25:44 PM
^^ :scratches heat in WTF face:
10/9/2008 9:54:57 PM
It's whatever every other GOP hack decides to post in this thread since this particular hack is incapable of making his mind up for himself (and thus makes every GOP member look bad).Instead it's "Government is bad" until confronted and then it's "Democrats cause bigger government!"Yes, call me out that this is not what you meant.Partisan hacks make me sick.[Edited on October 9, 2008 at 9:59 PM. Reason : omg I'm a Libertarian don't ya know? Please.]
10/9/2008 9:59:20 PM
10/9/2008 10:10:14 PM
10/10/2008 8:24:12 AM
There's a reason executive and legislative functions are separated.I'd have a problem if individual officers were deciding which laws to enforce (though they already do, in a limited way). I don't have a problem with the Sheriff--an elected official--deciding which laws to enforce.----On a side note: When property changes hands, I thought new owners are required to honor leases? I pretty sure that's in my rental contract.[Edited on October 10, 2008 at 9:13 AM. Reason : ]
10/10/2008 9:10:46 AM
10/10/2008 10:06:00 AM
10/10/2008 10:31:58 AM
10/10/2008 10:36:39 AM
^^ Are you going to play semantics, or are you going to acknowledge the clear reference to checks and balances?[Edited on October 10, 2008 at 10:37 AM. Reason : ]
10/10/2008 10:37:21 AM
10/10/2008 10:38:42 AM
Why does it take a sheriff to do a repo man's job? Thats over 100 houses per day every day for a full year, that would take something like a full fledged eviction department. The sad thing is all of this could be simply remedied by the bank sending out a 30 day notice to the property (not the owner).[Edited on October 10, 2008 at 10:47 AM. Reason : ]
10/10/2008 10:46:40 AM
aren't there already legal protections protecting renters from eviction due to foreclosure that the banks are just circumventing by not verifying the tenants? In many places foreclosure is NOT cause for eviction, is this not the case in Chicago? A quick google reveals that in Chicago unless a tenant is listed in foreclosure filing they must be given 90 days notice.The bank is trying to use taxpayers to pay for their investigations. The banks should be verifying tenants and renters should be given 90 days notice. [Edited on October 10, 2008 at 12:42 PM. Reason : .]
10/10/2008 12:41:07 PM
It is a good thing in NC that an eviction notice has to be posted at the property by the sheriff in advance of the hearing. They do not just show up and throw you out. You get a hearing date and a 10 day oppertunity to file an appeal on top of that after the hearing before you would be thrown out. This is not much time to find another apartment, but would still keep people from coming home from work and finding their shit on the sidewalk with no warning.
10/10/2008 12:53:08 PM
10/10/2008 1:50:31 PM
^ READING COMPREHENSION FAIL
10/10/2008 1:55:01 PM
^^^^ The banks probably do notify the owner.But the scumbag landlords probably don't tell their tennants they are going to be evicted, because they want to pick up that last couple months rent.
10/10/2008 2:07:57 PM
10/10/2008 2:08:06 PM
i dont think you understand. this isnt a typical landlord-initiated eviction of a renter that requires 90 days notice (or whatever the local municipality laws are) from the landlord to the renter.this is the bank/lender repossessing a house that the *owner* defaulted payments on. the *owner* has been given sufficient warning as per applicable foreclosure laws.the problem is, so many of the *renters* who lived in the house being foreclosed on, who weren't being given sufficient notice that they were going to be ousted. Many times, they were completely unaware that there was any problem whatsoever. the owners just continued to collect rent checks and didn't bother to tell their tenants that time was counting down ... that the bank was ready to repossess and give them the boot.
10/10/2008 2:17:43 PM
10/10/2008 2:55:32 PM
10/10/2008 3:05:37 PM
jesus christ. what part of this dont you get? are you just plain dense? it's the tenant-landlord laws that require a certain number of days (30, 60, 90, whatever ... http://www.rentlaw.com/eviction/illinoiseviction.htm) before a landlord can legally have a tenant evicted.THIS is a different situation. this situation, the LENDER is trying to repossess the home from the OWNER. it's a completely different process than a landlord-initiated eviction of a tenant.in this case, the lender is not communicating with the residents (ie tenant) of the Home, but with the owner. the owner ignores, and the bank proceeds with reposession, sending the sheriff out to clear the house of any inhabitants.the inhabitants arent even aware of the problem until the sheriff's department shows up to throw their shit out on the yard.the sheriff in this case has tried to get the banks to make a due-dilligence effort to find out -- at the least -- if there are children, elderly or disabled people in the home, and give them sufficient notice. the banks refuse, and have their lobbyists kill efforts in the legislature. the sheriff has said "enough already". he's got 10000 inmates in the County Jail to attend to, crimes to investigate, etc. He is not going to be the hired gun (on taxpayer money) to run law-abiding renters out of their rental homes, until the banks do the right thing and investigate who, exactly, is inhabiting the home.http://www.suntimes.com/news/otherviews/1211633,CST-NWS-evict09.article[Edited on October 10, 2008 at 3:28 PM. Reason : ]
10/10/2008 3:26:28 PM
when you are in a house you have to be evicted, your name has to be on the eviction order. the problem is the banks are not verifying the tenant before going through the eviction process. hell even a squatter has to be formally evicted if they squat somewhere long enough to establish residency. had the banks taken the due diligence to verify tenants they would have the correct name on the order. instead of doing that they are letting the tax payers pay for the sheriff to do this. and it used to be 30 days, but because of a new lay aimed at protecting renters in this exact situation it is now longer. to take advantage of this though they have to be in good standing and have paid all of their rent. ref:http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-1010edit1oct10,0,5832658.storyhttp://www.chicagotribune.com/classified/realestate/news/chi-re-umberger-landlords-0921sep21,0,7312567.column
10/10/2008 3:38:33 PM
Did you read your own article?
10/10/2008 3:46:37 PM
yeah, and its a national problem right now. consumerist.com has stories all the time from people trying to recover property after they are illegally evicted.
10/10/2008 3:53:21 PM
^, ^^ ... okay. i think we're all saying basically the same thing.
10/10/2008 5:34:33 PM
10/10/2008 8:39:10 PM
tell that to Cheney and Gonzalez
10/10/2008 10:15:43 PM
^Exactly!And also tell it to Reno.
10/10/2008 10:17:15 PM
10/10/2008 11:32:06 PM
10/11/2008 1:53:29 AM
10/11/2008 2:18:18 AM
really the problem is in the courts, they need to do a better job ensuring that the banks are providing all the right information in the foreclosure proceedings.
10/11/2008 9:59:28 AM
10/11/2008 10:39:22 AM
10/11/2008 11:03:20 AM
^And I don't support most of the laws that the legislature passes. So I guess we kinda even each other out.
10/11/2008 8:29:07 PM
10/16/2008 11:58:16 PM
10/17/2008 12:01:43 AM
set em up
10/17/2008 12:03:19 AM