With the sky-rocketing increase in foreclosures across the United States, mistakes are inevitable. Lenders, servicers and attorney firms must be vigilant to ensure that costly mistakes are held to a minimum. A startling example of such a mistake involves a situation where a Florida woman’s home was incorrectly foreclosed, sold to a third party, the local sheriff’s office removed the woman, her family and all her possessions before she was able to obtain a court order over-tuning the foreclosure sale.
It seems inconceivable, especially in a judicial foreclosure state such as Florida, that a mortgagee and its foreclosure firm could complete a foreclosure and actually cause the homeowner to be physically removed from a property other than the property pledged by the mortgagor and covered by the mortgagee’s mortgage or Deed of Trust, without someone discovering the error.
Adams & Edens and other foreclosure firms have procedures and checks and balances in place to ensure that the property intended as collateral for a loan is the property described in the mortgage or Deed of trust and is the property actually foreclosed upon. Thorough loan document review and pre-foreclosure title review and examination are key to discovering “mix-ups” with property ownership / identities.
