What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Alabama
We have a condo (second home) and the mortgage had been with Chase until last year, when the servicing was transferred to IBM LBPS. We are completely current, never had a late payment, etc. Last year they tried to force place flood insurance, even sending us a bill, despite the fact that there was more than sufficient flood insurance, with no lapse, ever. (We had even purchased a separate policy on our own, in addition to the condo association's flood policy, as it was pretty cheap.) They cancelled the force placed flood policy when we supplied documentation.
The condo association has a master hazard insurance policy that is more than sufficient to rebuild the units (very low building cost/square ft. here.) We have a personal HO6 policy for contents (extremely expensive, as the condo is in a coastal area subject to hurricanes.) However, the association's insurance on our building is for less than the remaining amount on our loan (though perfectly sufficient to rebuild.)
Having read some disturbing things about LBPS, I am terrified that they will decide the master policy isn't sufficient, or the deductible (over which we have little control) isn't low enough (currently $2500; there are 8 units.)
What can they actually insist upon, as it's a condo association? Chase never had a problem with the coverage, but I understand that LBPS has a relationship with SNIA (Sterling National) which "monitors" borrowers' insurance coverage and often force places insurance.
I know I'm worrying in advance here, but I want to be prepared, and know where to turn and what to do in case they try to force an expensive policy on us that we likely couldn't afford, and that could have serious repercussions. I'd love to refinance but that's not an option, as condo values have crashed in the last few years, and we owe more than what the unit is worth, at least at the moment.
Thanks for any insights you can provide.What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)?
We have a condo (second home) and the mortgage had been with Chase until last year, when the servicing was transferred to IBM LBPS. We are completely current, never had a late payment, etc. Last year they tried to force place flood insurance, even sending us a bill, despite the fact that there was more than sufficient flood insurance, with no lapse, ever. (We had even purchased a separate policy on our own, in addition to the condo association's flood policy, as it was pretty cheap.) They cancelled the force placed flood policy when we supplied documentation.
The condo association has a master hazard insurance policy that is more than sufficient to rebuild the units (very low building cost/square ft. here.) We have a personal HO6 policy for contents (extremely expensive, as the condo is in a coastal area subject to hurricanes.) However, the association's insurance on our building is for less than the remaining amount on our loan (though perfectly sufficient to rebuild.)
Having read some disturbing things about LBPS, I am terrified that they will decide the master policy isn't sufficient, or the deductible (over which we have little control) isn't low enough (currently $2500; there are 8 units.)
What can they actually insist upon, as it's a condo association? Chase never had a problem with the coverage, but I understand that LBPS has a relationship with SNIA (Sterling National) which "monitors" borrowers' insurance coverage and often force places insurance.
I know I'm worrying in advance here, but I want to be prepared, and know where to turn and what to do in case they try to force an expensive policy on us that we likely couldn't afford, and that could have serious repercussions. I'd love to refinance but that's not an option, as condo values have crashed in the last few years, and we owe more than what the unit is worth, at least at the moment.
Thanks for any insights you can provide.What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)?