Brendan Burgess
Founder
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In over 2,000 cases attended by Karl Deeter, Séamus Coffey and me, we have seen no orders for possession granted by the court where the borrower has been paying something meaningful regularly.
The group within the 2000 that are making meaningful payments but nevertheless, still in the courts process; what do you envisage will ultimately happen to them?
3) The lenders strike out those cases where the borrowers are making sustainable payments - roughly speaking, meeting the full interest on their mortgage.
- A respossession order does not mean actual repossession, the bank has to 'execute' the order - not sure what this mean?
It's interesting that the number of repossession proceedings initiated during the first 9 months of this year is down materially on the number of proceedings initiated during the same period of 2014.
At some point you would expect the backlog of cases to clear through the system but it's certainly going to take a very, very long time at this rate.
It would have been helpful and reassuring for those in arrears if Kitty had thrown in actual repossession stats at the end of the article. I wasn't expecting her to and she didn't dissapoint
I found the information confusing. We need something like the following:
View attachment 979
I will ask the Courts Service for it.
Holland has a second article on this and does point out that indeed the number of cases being brought is decreasing and she has suggested that there was probably a flurry of activity in Dublin initially and now this is easing off.
http://www.irishtimes.com/news/soci...-fewer-repossession-cases-initiated-1.2426228
"Banks are continuing to obtain home repossession orders in increasing numbers.
However, the rate at which they are initiating the arduous legal process to obtain such orders appears to be levelling off, the latest figures from the Courts Service indicate"
This is what should happen and might actually happen.
1) The Central Bank gets rid of the Targets Regime which forces banks to take legal actions which they know have no chance of succeeding and which cause huge stress.
2) The Central Bank publishes a definition of what a sustainable mortgage is.
3) The lenders strike out those cases where the borrowers are making sustainable payments - roughly speaking, meeting the full interest on their mortgage.
4) The law is changed to allow the speedier repossession of those who are paying nothing meaningful - either because their mortgage is too big or because they are deliberate defaulters.
The key message is: If you are in mortgage difficulty and you make any effort to keep your home, the lender will not succeed in repossessing it, if you don't want it repossessed.
Hi Brendan
While this is admittedly a rather extreme case, it does indicate that there are at least some limits to the patience of the Courts. Making last minute payments to a lender or pleas to a Court will not necessarily save a defaulting borrower from repossession in all circumstances.
Mind you, it took a very long time to get to this point...
http://www.irishtimes.com/news/crim...-for-second-time-over-mortgage-debt-1.2448867
Hi Sarenco
We don't know anything about the original order, but she was probably paying nothing at all and probably not engaging.
Brendan
I think the article is misleading.
The article title is "Woman put out of home for second time over mortgage debt" - this is incorrect.
She wasn't ordered out of the house the 2nd time for "mortgage debt".
She was put out for essentially trespassing. She had been removed previously on foot of the mortgage but had reoccupied the property without permission.
It should be remembered that many people do not own their family home, they rent it. The fact that they rent it doesn't make it any less of a home for them. When rental properties are re-possessed the tenant has lost their family home.Of the family homes repossessed, we don't know how many were single dwellers or emigrants. I don't know anybody who actually lost their home, except for the Killiney two with multiple properties and O'Donnell solicitor.
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