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January 30, 2008

The Deed of Reconveyance

And today, a guest blog from Eric Hartnett, Esq.  For those of us who have refinanced our loans, we have seen the Deed of Reconveyance before.  However, given the flurry of refinance loans in for the last 10 years, it became common that lenders, trustees and title companies would fail to request and record the Deed of Reconyance.

Eric writes:

Your Loan Secured by a Deed of Trust has been Paid Off - What Now?

You can finally see the light at the end of the tunnel and you've paid off your loan.  CONGRATULATIONS!

When you took out a loan and as security for the loan (evidenced by the Promissory Note or Loan Agreement), you agreed to have a Deed of Trust recorded against your home. California is a "trust deed" state rather than a "mortgage" state but in common parlance, most folks refer to their loan as a "mortgage."

Whether the loan is a 30 year mortgage or a 3 month loan, if you have made all of your loan payments, then you will want the lien (Deed of Trust) removed from your property (one does not actually have the Deed of Trust "removed," rather it is reconveyed to you, the borrower). What are the necessary steps under California law to accomplish this?

A reconveyance for a Deed of Trust upon satisfaction of any loan obligations is addressed in California Civil Code § 2941. §2941(b)(1) provides that if you have satisfied your loan obligations, then the lender (beneficiary under a Deed of Trust) or its assignee shall within 30 calendar days execute and deliver to the Trustee of the Deed of Trust several documents. These documents include the original note (i.e. the Promissory Note), Deed of Trust, and a request for a full reconveyance. The Trustee shall then execute the full reconveyance and shall record the full reconveyance with the county recorder within 21 days after receipt by the Trustee of the original note.

Of course, the above-described situation is the ideal scenario. What if the Trustee or the lender (beneficiary) do not fulfill their duties? You, as the trustor/borrower, have options. First, if the full reconveyance has not been recorded within 60 days of your last required loan payment, then you can make a written request to the beneficiary/lender to issue a full reconveyance under Civil Code §2941 (b)(2). Second, if the full reconveyance has not been executed and recorded despite you making all the payments and writing the aforementioned request to the lender, then 75 days after the last required loan payment was made you may have a title insurance company record a release of the obligation. Civil Code §2941(c).

Additionally, should you encounter an uncooperative Trustee or lender after you have satisfied your loan obligations, please note that there are civil and criminal penalties for some violations of Civil Code §2941.

January 04, 2008

What We Learned about Subprime Lending in 2007

Back in March of 2007, I noted on here at The DirtLaw blog that a domino effect was occurring, with local Californian company Central Pacific Mortgage getting little press.

Well, when Countrywide began imploding, it seems that national papers began to pay attention.

Things We Learned in 2007:

-  the bad underwriting practices of 2005 are coming back to haunt the industry.  Time to revert to tighter underwriting policies.

- when lenders are under water, likely scenarios include

  1. the short sale,
  2. the deed-in-lieu
  3. the judicial foreclosure plus deficience judgment and
  4. debtors surrendering collateral in bankruptcy
  5. debtors walking away from the property and not bothering to file bankruptcy

All in all, we've had a busy year at the firm, and I expect to see an increase in the number of judicial foreclosure lawsuits and deficiency judgment activity as well as more loan modifications.

Let's see if my other predictions come to pass about legislation trying to:

a) craft stricter penalties for "predatory lending" (only now vaguely defined by the California Finance Code)

b) modify the anti-deficiency statutes to include re-finance and HELOC loans as well as purchase money loans (possibly with a sunset provision)

c) abridge or abolish the availability of the stated-income loan (think this is already happening, so score 1 for the DirtLaw Blog.)

Mortgage Law Blogging

I started this blog as a way of adding value for my clients, and for people who were referred to me or the firm to get a flavor for my subject area expertise.  How very nice to see over a year later the nice emails and comments from readers that they find my articles on California Real Estate Law and private money lending (or "hard money" lending) to be informative and relevant.

At the California Mortgage Association's (CMA) October gathering in Las Vegas, I was seated next to a mortgage broker from the San Diego area of California.  At one point, he turned to me and said, "I've read your blog."  I was pretty tickled since he was not a client of mine. 

Recently, Tony Gallegos of The Mortgage Cicerone posted his list of top 20 bloggers of 2007 on mortgage related topics and included me.  Thanks for the vote of confidence. 

Here's to 2008, and the continuing saga of the SubPrime wild ride.

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