Seems odd. Why was the structure not detitled and legally attached to the real property? Allowing the title to remain would mean the home is not real property but personal property and as such, divisible from the real property. If detitled and attached to the real property, it makes it a combined unit with the land just like any other house on dirt.
Because that's just not how it works... Mortgage companies hate manufactured homes. for instance if you have a home (standard SFR) and an acre behind the home there is a manufactured home (like out in the woods lets say) that home has just been disqualified for a mortgage. Even though that man home is really nothing more than say a motor home or a tractor on the property legally.
There is nothing a borrower can do to turn a manufactured home into real property in the eyes of a traditional mortgage lender, additions, affiliations to the ground, etc do not change the way the lender views the residence. If it once was a single/double wide it will forever remain as such, unless it is dragged off and a traditional residence is placed or built on the property.
in the case I specifically mentioned the property was actually worth more while the home is considered "removable". In the eyes of the lending institute if we were to foreclose on the "real property" we would remove the home and sell the vacant unimproved land. (given its worth at the time 2005ish? was about 1.1m) The finance house made the assumption that any party willing that pay that kind of money for property would not be enticed by the presence of the manufactured unit. My goal was to bring the loan to closing and get paid, not to debate the title or legal procedures with the title company/house. The borrower just needed the cash so they didn't much care how it got done either. At that time loan rates were in the mid 6's and rates for man homes were 9+ so the borrower was happy to just have a closing in the mid 6's.
I don't know, it was a legal and title debacle. We closed it because risk was low and profits were high. Borrower knew they were getting a deal because they had tried to close several other places and had been unable to get to a decent closing. To my knowledge the loan remained fit, the borrower didn't default and payed off the loan... Some time later I did a loan for borrower's mother. I think the loan took 60+ days to close in a time when loans were closing in 15-30 days...
Again industry has changed, that loan would never get funded in today's market. Hard money, credit union, Man Home lender would be the only routes to get financing on such a property today.
Anyway as previously stated that is not really my area of expertise.
To my knowledge manufactured homes don't actually have mortgages (while their property can be mortgaged the home is titled personal property not deeded real-estate) they have personal property loans, as such they are not foreclosed upon at all but repossessed like cars. I know licensing is not required to write loans for man homes...
I have been burned several times when appraisals came in and showed a "single family residence" was in fact a manufactured home thus rendering the property ineligible for mortgage. "well only one family lives there" is a common response from borrowers in this scenario.
that was all very off topic though... Although I am now inclined to research this...