Wells Fargo is not allowing debtors who did not reaffirm their morta

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God help me. Please, "re" is one of the shortest prefixes in our language. No one should hyphenate re-? Reaffirm is a bankruptcy term. Please, please, please!
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On Jun 18, 2013, at 4:59 PM, "Frank W. Molloy" wrote:
> I am confused here, Did Wells send her a reaffirmation agreement which she declined to sign? If so, and this was a purchase money mortgage, what is her downside in re-affirming. No personal liability anyway isn't that correct? And the one action rule also protects her if it is a first mortgage. Perhaps Debtors should consider re-affirming....
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Yahoo Bot
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If it is not a purchase money, then there is liability. Further, our
judges will not sign a reaffirmation agreement for real property.

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Yahoo Bot
Posts: 22904
Joined: Sun Oct 18, 2020 11:38 pm


I am confused here, Did Wells send her a reaffirmation agreement which she declined to sign? If so, and this was a purchase money mortgage, what is her downside in re-affirming. No personal liability anyway isn't that correct? And the one action rule also protects her if it is a first mortgage. Perhaps Debtors should consider re-affirming....
I am confused here, Did Wells send her a reaffirmation agreement which she declined to sign? If so, and this was a purchase money mortgage, what is her downside in re-affirming. No personal liability anyway isn't that correct? And the one action rule also protects her if it is a first mortgage. Perhaps Debtors should consider re-affirming....

The post was migrated from Yahoo.
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