The lender will take possession of the property by foreclosure.
The lender will take possession of the property by foreclosure.
The lender will take possession of the property by foreclosure.
The lender will take possession of the property by foreclosure.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern MORTG---. That is, eight letter words with 1st letter M and 2nd letter O and 3rd letter R and 4th letter T and 5th letter G. In alphabetical order, they are: mortgage
You really haven't given enough information to answer this question. First, in order for a property to be owned as "tenancy by the entirety," you must be married. Furthermore, the property must have been acquired jointly, and by the same instrument. If the issuer of the deed (i.e., a mortgage company) unilaterally dropped one of the names that SHOULD have been on the deed, then you're in the money, assuming they do not rectify the situation. In such a situation, the property is still held as tenancy by the entirety, but the debt is only as against one of you, meaning that upon that person's death, the property would pass unencumbered to the remaining spouse. See, e.g., Regions Mortg., Inc. v. Muthler, 585 Pa. 464, 889 A.2d 39 (Pa.,2005).