New 90-Day Right To Reinstate Notice Required For Massachusetts Foreclosures
Vol. 2 | Issue 3 | June 2008
Patricia Antonelli and Charles Lovell, Wednesday 28 May 2008 - 01:00:00

A new Massachusetts law, as part of last year's "An Act Protecting and Preserving Home Ownership," has changed a number of regulations related to foreclosure practices, post-foreclosure accounting, post-foreclosure evictions and loan modifications.

The law's foreclosure provisions took effect on May 1, and the servicing industry should familiarize itself with how foreclosure-related matters - particularly the 90-day right of reinstatement - must now be handled in the state. The Massachusetts attorney general's office has vowed to strictly enforce the 90-day right to reinstate.

{OPENADS=zone=17}This piece of the new legislation applies to residential mortgage loans secured by borrower-occupied, one- to four-family homes, where default was accelerated after May 1 of this year. Borrowers are now entitled to a one-time, 90-day right to cure a monetary default before the loan can be accelerated. Borrowers are allowed this right one time in five years.

The burden, however, is on the mortgage holder or servicer to determine if the borrower is occupying the home. Servicers cannot rely upon the occupancy status of the property when the loan was originated.

The 90-day notice must be mailed by first-class mail to the last known address of the borrower or mortgagor. During the 90-day cure period, mortgage holders and servicers are prohibited from commencing foreclosure, as well as from charging or collecting attorneys' fees or other costs of collection, except late fees or per diem interest.

However, an unresolved issue currently being considered is whether the legal fees and costs incurred during the 90-day period for entering into a loan modification agreement or a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure may be charged to the borrower or mortgagor.

The 90-day letter must include:





Additional requirements include:




{OPENADS=zone=18}The DOB has stated it will not accept any papers in connection with this requirement by facsimile, by mail or in person. Instead, to comply with the DOB filing requirement, the information must be input electronically in an online database (see www.mass.gov/dob). However, of concern to the industry is the DOB's statement that the password used to create the record (when the first filing is input) will be the only password for future access.

Finally, the governor, DOB, attorney general, legislators and consumer advocates believe mortgage holders and servicers have an absolute obligation to reach out to borrowers during the 90-day period to explore loan modifications, forbearance agreements, loan restructurings, refinancings and other avenues to avoid foreclosure and loss of property.

Patricia Antonelli (pa@psh.com) and Charles Lovell (cal@psh.com) are attorneys with Partridge Snow & Hahn LLP.


this content item is from Mortgage Orb
( http://www.mortgageorb.com/e107_plugins/content/content.php?content.1780 )