mo42186;3092851]https://www.waltersanford.com/2010/11/23/a-tale-of-pain-buyers-can-sue-the-listing-agent-in-a-short-sale/
but that is not the situation you have. Hell, if you want to argue you replace the seller in the lenders pre-existing duty situation, they guess what; YOU OWE THE LIEN just as the seller owes the lien. The lender is not obligated to pay off the lien. It is the sellers obligation and since you want to claim their position, now it is yours.
Read this. I know it also says buyer can't sue lender, but again, this is why we're going to small claims court. It's not a slam dunk case, but it's worth a shot.
Gotta love it. Even you admit it supports my position yet you still feel you have some standing to sue. It doesn't matter if it is small claims or some superior court; if you don't have standing, you don't have standing. Taking it to small claims doesn't magically create some special exception to that.
"Related to the lender, as much as you do not want to hear that answer, under the pre-existing duty rule, an agreement to modify a contract without legal consideration is not valid. Putting this in more clear terms, the lender is owed $350,000 under a contract with a pre-existing duty to pay that lender that $350,000.
You, the seller, and/or the buyer are trying to hold the lender accountable for an agreement to take less than is owed to close the sale.
No. the buyer is not trying to hold the lender accountable for anything. That is between the seller and the lender...
until such time as a contract is executed. Then you have a totally different issue but that is not what you are arguing here. You are trying to slip into this as having standing to sue concerning the contract between the seller and the lender; you don't. The issue in your link is one where the lender attempted to refuse to comply with their contract with the seller and as a third party beneficiary, the buyer would have standing. That is not the issue you are facing though. You are claiming they are obligated to pay a lien that they are not obligated to pay.
However, a basic premise of a contract is money consideration or some sort of consideration. That subsequent agreement, to take less in an existing contract, is not supported by any consideration. The seller is actually going to pay less than the pre-existing duty requires, therefore no consideration, and the lender is going to get less than their existing contract states, no consideration there either. The agreement they have made that they would take less is not enforceable for lack of consideration if they change their mind."
actually you are wrong here as well but I'm not going to bother explaining it since it won't get beyond your skull. It appears to be quite thick.
So, yes it is the rule that allows the bank to accept or reject any offer at any time because the short sale is not providing any additional consideration. It has everything to do with it. There's a pre-existing duty for the seller to pay off a mortgage amount of X and the bank doesn't have to honor a contract where it accepts anything less than that. Hence, a short sale is liable to fall apart at any time because of the pre-existing duty that seller has to mortgagee is not supported by additional consideration.
You have fun with that. You are not a successor in contract so they do not have any duty to you under the pre-existing duty rule. The pre-existing duty rule has nothing to do with the short sale. It only has to do with the original loan contract.
You do realize that in accepting a short sale, all the lender is actually doing is agreeing to release their security interest in exchange for the negotiated amount, right? The original loan contract is not released. The lender (in many states but not all) can actually sue the original borrower for the deficiency if the lender has not waived that right.
There's a pre-existing duty for the seller to pay off a mortgage amount of X and the bank doesn't have to honor a contract where it accepts anything less than that. Hence, a short sale is liable to fall apart at any time because of the pre-existing duty that seller has to mortgagee is not supported by additional consideration.
Oh, now you are really wrong. Just give it up.