Mortgages Flashcards

1
Q

What are the six types of security interest in real estate?

A

(1) mortgage
(2) deed of trust
(3) installment land contract
(4) absolute deed
(5) sale-leaseback
(6) equitable vendor’s lien

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2
Q

What is a mortgage?

A

Mortgagor = debtor
Mortgagee = lender
If mortgagor defaults on the loan, the lender can realize the mortgaged real estate by judicial foreclosure sale.

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3
Q

What is a deed of trust?

A

Debtor = trustor. Lender = beneficiary
Trustor gives a deed of trust to a third party trustee. On default, the lender instructs the trustee to foreclose the deed of trust by sale

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4
Q

What is an installment land contract?

A

Installment purchaser obtains legal title only when the full contract price has been paid. A forfeiture clause allows the seller to cancel the contract and retake possession on default, keeping all money paid

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5
Q

What is an absolute deed?

A

Treated as an equitable mortgage and creditor must foreclose by judicial action

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6
Q

What is a sale-leaseback?

A

Owner sells for cash and leases back from purchaser. May be treated as disguised mortgage

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7
Q

What is an equitable vendor’s lien?

A

Arises by implication of law when a seller transfers title and a portion of the purchase price remains unpaid

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8
Q

Can a mortgagee transfer the mortgage without the note?

A

In some states a transfer of a mortgage automatically transfers a note, unless the mortgagee-transferor expressly reserves rights (in which case the transferee can judicially compel transfer of the note).

In others, a transfer of the mortgage without the note is void.

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9
Q

Can the mortgagee transfer the note without the mortgage?

A

A note can be transferred without the mortgage, but the mortgage will automatically follow unless the mortgagee expressly reserves the right

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10
Q

What are the methods of transferring the note?

A

Endorse and deliver or a separate document of assignment or by a separate document

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11
Q

What is a holder in due course?

A

A transferee becomes a holder in due course of a note when:

(1) note must be negotiable in form (payable either “to bearer” or “to the order of X” with a promise to pay a sum certain and no other promise)
(2) note must be endorsed and signed by named payee
(3) note must be delivered to transferee
(4) transferee must take note in good faith and pay value for it

A holder in due course takes the note free of personal defenses of the maker (failure of consideration, fraud in the inducement, waiver, estoppel, and payment) but not of real defenses (incapacity, duress, illegality, fraud in the execution, forgery, discharge in insolvency or other insolvency)

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12
Q

What is the effect of an assumption agreement?

A

If a grantee signs an assumption agreement, they become primarily liable on the mortgage and mortgagor is secondarily liable as a surety. The mortgagee is able to sue either.

If no assumption agreement, grantee has no personal liability but if they do not pay, the loan may be foreclosed

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13
Q

What are due-on-sale clauses?

A

Most modern mortgages allow a lender to demand full payment if the mortgagor transfers any interest in th property without the lender’s consent

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14
Q

What are defenses to an action on the mortgage?

A

Same as defenses in an action on the underlying note – like duress, consideration, fraud, mistake.

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15
Q

What do consumer protection laws require of mortgagees?

A

UDAAP protects residential mortgagors from unfair, deceptive, and abusive lending practices
Cannot give a residential mortgagor a loan beyond the mortgagor’s ability to repay at the time
After default, a mortgagee must in good faith evaluate an application for an alternative to foreclosure
Violations here are defenses to foreclosure

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16
Q

What is the effect of discharge of the mortgage on a mortgagee’s right to foreclose?

A

Precludes the mortgagee’s right to foreclose

17
Q

What are the three theories of title?

A

(1) lien theory (most states follow) – mortgagee is holder of security interest and the mortgagor is deemed the owner until foreclosure. mortgagee has no possession right prior to foreclosure
(2) title theory – legal title is in the mortgagee until satisfaction or foreclosure and mortgagee entitled to possession on demand
(3) intermediate theory. – legal title in the mortgagor until default, when it transfers to the mortgagee. May demand possession upon default

18
Q

What is redemption in equity?

A

At any time prior to the foreclosure sale, the mortgagor may redeem the property by paying the amount due. As a result of an acceleration clause, this may be the entire balance of the mortgage. This right can’t be waived in the mortgage.

19
Q

What is statutory redemption?

A

Half of states allow the mortgagor to redeem for a fixed period after the foreclosure sale has occurred

20
Q

What is a foreclosure’s effect on other interests in the property?

A

Foreclosure has no effect on the interests senior to the foreclosing interest, but destroys all junior interest. A junior interest will be preserved if the foreclosing interest holder fails to join the junior interest holder in the action.

21
Q

What determines the priority of mortgages on a property?

A

Priority generally determined by chronology but may be changed by (1) operation of a recording statute where a mortgagee fails to record, (2) express terms of a subordination agreement between interest holders, (3) existence of a purchase money mortgage, (4) modification of a senior mortgage (pushes it down the line), (5) granting of optional future advances by mortgagee with notice of a junior lien (will have seniority over the advances), or (6) subrogation (senior mortgage refinanced with a junior one)

22
Q

What is a purchase money mortgage?

A

Mortgage issued in exchange for a loan used to purchase the property, either to the seller as part of the purchase price or a third party lender. They have priority over senior interests but subsequent interests may defeat their seniority by operation of a recording statute. A seller’s PMM has priority over a lender’s, if both are lenders, chronology dictates priority.

23
Q

How are the proceeds of a foreclosure sale applied?

A

Proceeds are applied to (1) the expenses of the sale, then (2) the principal and interest of the foreclosed loan, (3) the junior interests in order of priority, (4) the mortgagor

24
Q

What happens if the proceeds of foreclosure are insufficient to satisfy the mortgage debt?

A

mortgagee retains a personal cause of action against the mortgagor for the deficiency

25
Q

What theories may a court use to avoid the harsh result of forfeiture on default of an installment land contract?

A
    • equity of redemption (grace period for paying balance)
    • restitution (refund the excess over damages)
    • treat the contract as a mortgage
    • waiver if the vendor has a pattern of accepting late payments
    • election of remedies (vendor must choose either damages or specific performance)
26
Q

What’s the distinction between the note and mortgage?

A
Note = promise to make periodic payments to repay the amount borrowed with interest
Mortgage = gives the lender a property interest allowing them to seek foreclosure on default on the note
27
Q

What happens when a grantee assumes a mortgage and negotiates a modification with the mortgagee?

A

The original mortgagor’s liability is fully discharged

28
Q

What is the effect of a payment to the original mortgagee after transfer of a note?

A

If a negotiable instrument ha been transferred by the mortgagee, any payment to the mortgagee will not count. The new holder can demand payment even if th mortgagor has not had notice of the transfer.

If it is a nonnegotiable note, the mortgagor’s payment is effective against the transferee until the mortgagor receives notice of the transfer

29
Q

What law applies in a foreclosure action?

A

the law of the state in which the property is located. a choice of law clause aimed at picking a state with weaker consumer protection laws is usually void

30
Q

What risks does a mortgagee assume when they take possession?

A

duties like accounting for rents, prudent management of the property and tort liability

31
Q

How do mortgagees use receivership?

A

Often to intercept rents before foreclosure by appointing a receiver to manage the property. Courts generally appoint receivers for rental property if:

(1) waste is occurring
(2) value of property is inadequate to satisfy the debt
(3) the mortgagor is insolvent