Question for bankers with knowledge of home equity loans?
Wednesday, 1. September 2010
I had an allodial title to my home, which was passed down. I signed a contract with a bank for a Home equity loan. As a condition of the loan the Bank agreed with me that I Did not agree to tax deductions in the Home equity loan; they would not deduct a property tax, no agreement to take it out the mortgage payment; (3) I Don’t have to pay taxes in mortgage payment agreeing I would pay property taxes due to a separate arrangement with Township Tax Office if payments are due. I became surety still under the Home equity loan. The Bank forecloses on the property or Home equity loan for failure to receive payment. The Bank didn’t receive payment because they refused it. Was the bank refusal not breach of contract? There was non-payment of monthly obligations on the loan because they refuse to receive payment because of failure to pay property taxes. The Bank forecloses because Township stated I owed property tax. When I was continuing not to pay property taxes after a while the Bank foreclose on the payment. How did failure to pay property taxes breach contract my contract with the bank? Tax bills are sent out by Township Tax Office, which I refuse to honor. I didn’t have a Mortgage Loan rather Home equity loan. United Jersey Bank breached the contract when they did not receive any payment thus the contract was void. The tax issue was separate. Under New Jersey Statute it is the property owner’s responsibility to make sure that the property taxes are paid when due, even though the owner may not have received the tax bill. A bill is not necessary to make a payment. There was no court decision that as the person who inherited the home property taxes were due. Under New Jersey Statute it is the property owner’s responsibility to make sure that the property taxes are paid when due. Yet how do I owe property taxes? The property was taking for non-payment of Federal Reserve notes.
Melany Says:
If you are a first time borrower of a home equity loan it is imperative that you have a checklist of essential questions that you need to ask each and every lender. The answers to these questions will provide a valuable reference to base your comparisons on. What’s the interest rate? Knowing this is crucial. The interest rate will determine<!–the monthly payment you will need to make. You also need to know if the interest rate is of a fixed or adjustable nature. Fixed rate implies that the monthly payments will remain constant, while an adjustable rate implies that rates will fluctuate depending on market conditions.
http://best-loans.awardspace.com/homeloans.htm
In adjustable rate, when will rates change? If your interest rate on the home equity loan is of the adjustable variety, you need to know three things: when the rate is going to change (that is under what conditions), how frequently will the rate change and what’s the average–>percentage by which the adjustable rate will change. What is the Annual Percentage Rate or APR? The APR on the home equity loan will determine the yearly payment you will need to make towards this.The higher the payment in terms of points, the lower is the interest rate.
wartz Says:
If you are complianing about the property being taken for non-apyment of Federal Reserve notes, you have been listening to kooks. If you don’t pull your head out of where the sun don’t shine you are going to be out on the street with a bunch of big words that mean absolutely nothing.