You are leaving out important information: when was the chapter 13 ended and why did it end?
If the chapter 13 has not been closed or dismissed, the mortgage should not be in foreclosure unless you missed several post-petition payments and the mortgagee got relief from the automatic stay. You cannot have two bankruptcy filings open at the same time.
If the chapter 13 was ended pursuant to a section of the bankruptcy code, you may be able to refile, but you may not have the benefit of the automatic stay.
Consult a local bankruptcy lawyer.
When you either voluntarily give up the house or you stop making payments (foreclosure).
If your chapter 7 has been closed, yes - if you can find a lender for another mortgage. Your credit scores will have lowered because of the filing and discharge.
If the house is headed for foreclosure, anyone on the title and the mortgage is facing foreclosure, not just one of the owners. If the daughter was responsible for the mortgage payments by agreement with her grandmother, and got behind in payments, she may be able to pull the mortgage out of foreclosure by a Chapter 13, if she can afford the plan payments and the current mortgage payments. If the Chapter 13 cannot succeed without financial input from the grandmother, it will be up to her to let it go forward and lose the house. Either way, the fact that the house is in foreclosure will affect her credit score.
At the discretion of the lender, a house can be foreclosed after a period of missing payments.
Houses go into foreclosure when the owner can no longer afford to make the house payments. Many people look to purchase foreclosure homes as they can often be purchased for a low price.
Because the house has been returned to the lender. It is not "yours" in any sense and you have not arranged to reclaim the house by making payments.
If you are unable to make the mortgage payments, you will lose the house to foreclosure- there is nothing you can do at that point. The only option would be to convert to a chapter 7 to discharge any other non-mortgage debt. If you want to keep the cars (or any secured debt for that matter) you will need to KEEP making those payments.
The property may go into foreclosure, but that has nothing to do with the tenant. Until there is a foreclosue sale, the tenant is obligated to pay rent to the owner.
once you are 90 days down they can start with a foreclosure.
If the primary borrower cannot make mortgage payments, the cosigner is also legally responsible for the loan and may need to step in to cover the payments to avoid foreclosure. If the cosigner lets the house go into foreclosure, it can significantly impact their credit score as well. Additionally, lenders may pursue the cosigner for any outstanding balance after the foreclosure, making it essential for both parties to communicate and explore options, such as selling the property or negotiating with the lender.
Of course you do. If you don't the interest and late penalties will add up and if it takes a while to sell the house you may lose it by foreclosure instead. You signed a contract to make monthly payments and you are legally bound to its terms.Of course you do. If you don't the interest and late penalties will add up and if it takes a while to sell the house you may lose it by foreclosure instead. You signed a contract to make monthly payments and you are legally bound to its terms.Of course you do. If you don't the interest and late penalties will add up and if it takes a while to sell the house you may lose it by foreclosure instead. You signed a contract to make monthly payments and you are legally bound to its terms.Of course you do. If you don't the interest and late penalties will add up and if it takes a while to sell the house you may lose it by foreclosure instead. You signed a contract to make monthly payments and you are legally bound to its terms.
Yes, but contact your mortgage company and make the arrangements. Lenders always prefer making arrangements rather than going into foreclosure because they lose money on every house foreclosed on.