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Facing foreclosure in Madison County
Indiana Foreclosure & Investment News
Published July 03, 2007 06:48 pm -
As companies started investing more and more money into businesses that
offer subprime home loans, more and more people started getting loans
they could not afford to pay back. Now these people are stuck deciding
if they should pay for the mortgage or pay for food.
In 2006, the Madison County Sheriff’s Civil Department sold 1,082 homes through sheriff sales.
It was a combination of money-hungry businesses and people desperately wanting a home that made this mess.
As companies started
investing more and more money into businesses that offer subprime home
loans, more and more people started getting loans they could not afford
to pay back. Now these people are stuck deciding if they should pay for
the mortgage or pay for food.
In 2006, the Madison County Sheriff’s Civil
Department sold 1,082 homes through sheriff sales. This year will be
similar to last year. These houses are set to be sold when owners do
not pay for more than three months of house payments, Abby Ramsey,
court administrator for the sheriff’s department, said.
“To cause a sheriff’s sale, a person has to
miss three house payments,” she said. “Once they miss the third
payment, the bank contacts their attorney, and they do a foreclosure,
they sue them. At that time, they have a hearing. The bank gets a
judgment.”
Once that judgment is put in the books at
that clerk’s office, the attorney signs the praecipe, a formal paper
that tells the court to issue that foreclosure to Ramsey. Then the
house goes to the sheriff sale, where anyone can put in a verbal bid
for the house. The bank puts in the first bid.
“If someone outbids the bank, they own it that day,” Ramsey said.
A guaranteed check is due by the end of that day, Ramsey said.
In 2005, Madison County had 957 houses go
through the sheriff’s sales. The number of sales started going up
dramatically after 1995, when the county sold 46 houses all year,
Ramsey said. The rates started doubling in 1998, she said.
Larry Robbins, an Anderson bankruptcy
lawyer, said he thought that the mortgage foreclosures have led to some
bankruptcies, but there are fewer people filing for bankruptcy because
of the law that passed in 2005 that made penalties for bankruptcy
stronger.
People have changes in their lives that affect how much they can pay each month, Robbins said.
“It could be that their employment has changed,” he said. “They’re making less money than they were.”
And with subprime loans, the adjustable
interest rates increase sometimes every six months, causing more
problems. The interest rates can go up to 11 or 12 percent, while a
conventional mortgage interest rate sits at 6 or 7 percent, Robbins
said.
But this is not a problem only in Madison
County. It’s happening all over the country. The Wall Street Journal
published an article June 27 about subprime loaning practices.
According to the article, about 13 percent of subprime loans are near
foreclosure, affecting tens of thousands of homeowners. The Center for
Responsible Learning has projected that about 20 percent of subprime
borrowers from the past two years could go into foreclosure, which will
cause 2.2 million people to lose their homes.
The problem is hitting California and the
Midwest the hardest. The Web site CNNMoney.com issued a list of the top
500 foreclosure ZIP codes, and on that list Ohio had 49 ZIP codes,
Michigan had 34, Illinois had 25 and Indiana had 16. The places in
Indiana were all in Indianapolis except for two — one in Fort Wayne and
one in South Bend.
Robbins said the Midwest is most affected because of the way the economy has gone in the area.
“I think a lot of it has to with the economy,” he
said. “A lot of jobs have gone away, you know, the high paying jobs,
and people’s income have gone down.”
Add onto that the rising real estate taxes and insurance, and some homeowners are in for trouble.
“We’re going more toward the minimum wages
jobs,” Robbins said. “We’ve lost so many good paying jobs. It comes
down to a situation where a person has to go through a (job transfer),
and sometimes they just abandon their homes.”
Number of sheriff sales (foreclosures) in county
1985 — 92 houses
1989 — 76 houses
1995 — 46 houses
2005 — 957 houses
2006 — 1,082 houses
Source: Madison County Sheriff’s Civil Department
Number of foreclosures filed in county
2004 — 966
2005 —1,064
Article Source http://www.theheraldbulletin.com/local/local_story_184184806.html
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