No. Generally, you must own the real estate in order to obtain a mortgage. You must be able to convey the title to the bank for the life of the mortgage. In certain situations a bank may loan money on a leashold interest, however, the leasehold interest must be of sufficient value for the bank to take the risk of loaning money to the leaseholder.
Yes, if the person whose name is on the mortgage owned the property at the time they signed the mortgage. If they subsequently transferred the property, it was transferred subject to the mortgage.If the person who signed the mortgage did not own the property at the time, the mortgage is not enforceable.Yes, if the person whose name is on the mortgage owned the property at the time they signed the mortgage. If they subsequently transferred the property, it was transferred subject to the mortgage.If the person who signed the mortgage did not own the property at the time, the mortgage is not enforceable.Yes, if the person whose name is on the mortgage owned the property at the time they signed the mortgage. If they subsequently transferred the property, it was transferred subject to the mortgage.If the person who signed the mortgage did not own the property at the time, the mortgage is not enforceable.Yes, if the person whose name is on the mortgage owned the property at the time they signed the mortgage. If they subsequently transferred the property, it was transferred subject to the mortgage.If the person who signed the mortgage did not own the property at the time, the mortgage is not enforceable.
A mortgage is a loan secured by your real estate. If you own real property you can borrow more with a mortgage.A mortgage is a loan secured by your real estate. If you own real property you can borrow more with a mortgage.A mortgage is a loan secured by your real estate. If you own real property you can borrow more with a mortgage.A mortgage is a loan secured by your real estate. If you own real property you can borrow more with a mortgage.
No. In order to be the owner of real property you must be named as grantee on the deed. If your name is on the mortgage but not on the deed you have obligated yourself to pay for real property you do not own. If the primary borrower defaults the lender will go after you for full payment of the mortgage yet you do not own the property.
If both own the property then both must sign the mortgage.If both own the property then both must sign the mortgage.If both own the property then both must sign the mortgage.If both own the property then both must sign the mortgage.
The grantee in the deed is the owner of the property. A person who does not own the property can agree to sign the mortgage and be responsible for paying for the property. That does not give them an ownership interest.The grantee in the deed is the owner of the property. A person who does not own the property can agree to sign the mortgage and be responsible for paying for the property. That does not give them an ownership interest.The grantee in the deed is the owner of the property. A person who does not own the property can agree to sign the mortgage and be responsible for paying for the property. That does not give them an ownership interest.The grantee in the deed is the owner of the property. A person who does not own the property can agree to sign the mortgage and be responsible for paying for the property. That does not give them an ownership interest.
If your name is on the deed but not the mortgage, it means you own the property but are not responsible for the mortgage payments.
Of course not. When a property owner gives a mortgage to the bank they must sign over an interest in their property so that if they default on the mortgage the bank can take possession of the property by forelosure. You cannot pledge property as security for loan if you don't own the property. Granting a mortgage to a lender requires the consent and signature of the owner.Of course not. When a property owner gives a mortgage to the bank they must sign over an interest in their property so that if they default on the mortgage the bank can take possession of the property by forelosure. You cannot pledge property as security for loan if you don't own the property. Granting a mortgage to a lender requires the consent and signature of the owner.Of course not. When a property owner gives a mortgage to the bank they must sign over an interest in their property so that if they default on the mortgage the bank can take possession of the property by forelosure. You cannot pledge property as security for loan if you don't own the property. Granting a mortgage to a lender requires the consent and signature of the owner.Of course not. When a property owner gives a mortgage to the bank they must sign over an interest in their property so that if they default on the mortgage the bank can take possession of the property by forelosure. You cannot pledge property as security for loan if you don't own the property. Granting a mortgage to a lender requires the consent and signature of the owner.
No. When you mortgage a property you are signing yourinterest over to the bank as collateral for the loan. You can't do that if you don't own the property.
A joint mortgage is executed by two people who own real estate. Each is responsible for paying the mortgage in full.A co-signer has no ownership interest in the property but they have agreed to pay off the mortgage if the primary borrower fails to pay. In other words, they agree to pay the mortgage for property they don't own.
You can check with local bankers but that is unlikely. A mortgage is a security interest a property owner grants to a bank. If the mortgage isn't paid the bank can take possession of the property by foreclosure. If you don't own the property you cannot grant an interest to a bank.You can check with local bankers but that is unlikely. A mortgage is a security interest a property owner grants to a bank. If the mortgage isn't paid the bank can take possession of the property by foreclosure. If you don't own the property you cannot grant an interest to a bank.You can check with local bankers but that is unlikely. A mortgage is a security interest a property owner grants to a bank. If the mortgage isn't paid the bank can take possession of the property by foreclosure. If you don't own the property you cannot grant an interest to a bank.You can check with local bankers but that is unlikely. A mortgage is a security interest a property owner grants to a bank. If the mortgage isn't paid the bank can take possession of the property by foreclosure. If you don't own the property you cannot grant an interest to a bank.
The owners of the property must sign the mortgage. A party who is not an owner should not sign the note and mortgage since they would be taking responsibility for paying for property they do not own.The owners of the property must sign the mortgage. A party who is not an owner should not sign the note and mortgage since they would be taking responsibility for paying for property they do not own.The owners of the property must sign the mortgage. A party who is not an owner should not sign the note and mortgage since they would be taking responsibility for paying for property they do not own.The owners of the property must sign the mortgage. A party who is not an owner should not sign the note and mortgage since they would be taking responsibility for paying for property they do not own.
First, the person who is the grantee on the deed owns the property. Period. Second, the person who signed the mortgage is obligated to pay the bank. If you signed a mortgage but didn't own the property the bank can come after you to pay if the property owner defaults on the mortgage. It will ruin your credit. Your answer: If you do not own the property and yet you signed the mortgage then you own nothing and you will be held responsible for paying the mortgage.