Laurie Murphy |
When a borrower defaulted on her payment
obligations under a purchase money note secured by a deed of trust on her
residential property, the lender served a notice of default. The borrower was able to negotiate a short
sale with a third party prior to the foreclosure sale but the agreed to price
was less than the amount outstanding on the loan. The lender consented to the short sale with
an agreement that they were only releasing the security, not any
deficiency. The borrower then sued the
lender after it attempted to collect on the amount of the deficiency it claimed
she still owed.
The trial court sided
with the lender. On appeal by the
borrower the court of appeal held that any lender who either forecloses or
agrees to a short sale of residential property secured by a deed of trust
cannot pursue the borrower for any deficiency after either a foreclosure sale
or a short sale. Coker v. JP Morgan Chase.
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