From the desk of R If you have not voluntarily signed the property over to the lender that you were in default with there may be a way. Depending on what state you are in there is a time set called right of redemption period The best experts to speak with that can offer you all of the details in your state are attorneys that deal with foreclosure However, even when that process is available, (and even where applicable it normally only applies to Tax certitifcate foreclosures not mortgage or creditor ones) it absolutely requires you to pay for the property, and all late fees, accrued interest, costs incurred in the sale and resale, and a, (normally fairly high), interest rate for the period the new buyer has had it plus any costs and imporvements made during the redemption period, in one lump sum Generally meaning, even if you think you could possibly get a new mortgage for the place (which with a foreclosure claose at hand is unlikely), the amount of that mortgage (or that you would pay for it), is higher than it's value Answer In California, the only way is to re-purchase the property. If it sold at the foreclousre auction, even back to the lender, it's final Adding: The proceeds of the foreclosure sale go to the one foreclosing.
The title and ownership (making it possible for them to then get possession through eviction or such), go to the successful bidder. (This can be the same party, as in the bank). Only by buying the property back from that party, if they even are interested in selling, for whatever terms they demand (cash/terms/etc.), can one once again own it Possession, which is the termmyour using but does not equal ownership, is possible if that new owner is interested in renting to you.
(Of course, if it is the same lender that foreclosed, considering their last experience in receiving timely payments, they may not want to rent to the one they foreclosed on, if they are interested in renting at all! ).
Description: In October 1925, architect Addison Mizner announced construction of houses for his company’s executives and his brother, the Reverend Henry Mizner, in the subdivision now known as Old Floresta. The Robinson Company, a New York contractor building the Cloister Inn in Boca Raton, won the contract for 29 Mizner-designed houses. With the end of the real estate boom in 1926, the Mizner Development Corporation collapsed before Robinson could complete the houses.
The Chicago partners, headed by Hermann V. Von Holst, from whom Mizner purchased the land for Old Floresta, held the mortgage and filed for foreclosure. Von Holst then supervised the completion of the unfinished houses, proposed new names for the streets, and suggested calling the subdivision Floresta, “a delightful rural place” in Spanish.
Since the January 29, 18969s, Old Floresta, with its Spanish-style architecture of rough-finished stucco walls, wrought iron balconies, and barrel tile roofs, combined with the subdivision’s narrow tree-lined streets and lush landscaping, has remained one of Boca Raton’s most distinctive neighborhoods.
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