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Articles Posted in real estate loan

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Real Estate Investors – The Requirements for an Investor to be a Holder In Due Course, Safe from Borrower’s Defenses.

Real Estate investors in California often work through a licensed Broker, who puts together investor’s cash with potential borrowers. Investors prefer these arrangements (hard-money loans) because they can obtain a higher interest rate for their money, fully secured by a deed of trust recorded against real property. These loans are…

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California Real Estate Appraisals – the Test to Determine Who May Rely On Them

Most California real estate appraisals are done to obtain a loan secured by the property, often involving the initial purchase. The lender requires the appraisal, often requiring the borrower to pay for it. However, parties other than the lender obtain copies of the appraisal. The question then arises, who may…

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Unenforceable Sham Loan Guaranty – When the Guarantor & Borrower are the Same, or the Lender Interferes With the Deal

In California, generally when a real estate buyer defaults on the loan and loses the property to foreclosure, the lender may not pursue a deficiency judgment against the borrower where the foreclosure sale proceeds are not enough to cover the amount of the debt. Lenders may go after loan guarantors…

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Loan Guaranties and Lender Misconduct – When the Guarantor Is Released Due to the Lenders’ Actions.

Guarantors of California commercial real estate loans are regularly required to sign waivers of defenses. Guarantors would otherwise have the usual defenses that borrowers have, such as anti-deficiency protection (see at bottom re: the Gradsky Waiver). Civil Code section 2856 specifies what specific defenses may be waived; the waiver often…

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The Security First Rule – The Steps to Obtaining a Deficiency Judgment

There are numerous anti-deficiency laws concerning California real estate. An Important one, especially with commercial real estate, is CCP section 726(a). It is broadly described as the “one form of action” rule. This broad rule has two components – a) the “one action rule”, a prohibition of multiple lawsuits to…

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What California Easement Holders Must Do To Get Notice of Foreclosure of the Property

Under California foreclosure law, a trustee’s sale eliminates all interests in the property that are recorded after the deed of trust was recorded. For that reason, holders of interests want to get notice that the property is being foreclosed. Generally, the foreclosing trustee is only required to provide notice of…

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Title Insurance does not protect against a Notice of an Abatement Action, which is not a lien, encumbrance, or defect of title; and preliminary reports can’t get no respect.

When California lenders and buyers seek title insurance, they want to be sure that the title to the property that they are receiving, or the security for their loan, is what they expect it to be. In the case of the lender, they want to be sure that they are…

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Deeds in Lieu of Foreclosure – The Rule for Determining When The Transfer Causes a Merger, Allowing Junior Liens to Survive.

A deed in lieu of foreclosure is occasionally used as an alternative to a foreclosure sale. The borrower merely deeds the property back to the lender “in lieu of foreclosure.” The lender does not have to go through the time and expense of a foreclosure, and the borrower/owner gets the…

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A Full Credit Bid on California Property Prevents a Lender From Recovering Insurance Proceeds; the Simple Solution

When a foreclosure sale occurs, the lender often bids at the sale the entire amount due on the loan. If no one bids higher, they obtain the property. But are they entitled to then collect insurance for pre-foreclosure damage? Sometimes insurers obtain their own insurance policy, which covers them for…

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The Security First Rule – how a lender with multiple California properties as security for its loan must protect itself when releasing one of the properties from the deed of trust, and still get a deficiency judgment.

The security first rule is one of the numerous anti-deficiency protects provided to borrowers under California law. “Security first” means that a creditor must first exhaust all real property security through judicial process in the “one form of action” authorized by Code of Civil Procedure section 726–that is, a judicial…

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