Northern Kentucky Real Estate Auction!!!
For more information about these homes and the auction, contact our office at 859-647-0700 or email, mike@mikeparker.com.
The Mike Parker Team
Displaying blog entries 361-370 of 400
For more information about these homes and the auction, contact our office at 859-647-0700 or email, mike@mikeparker.com.
Calling all parents.......in the spirit of the holidays, Cincinnati Bell is giving FREE personalized phone calls directly from the North Pole to all good little boys and girls. I do this every year for my son and I have to say what a thrill it is for him to receive a call from Santa!!! It's easy and you can sign up as many times as you want. To sign up today, simply click on the following link:
http://www.cincinnatibell.com/consumer/holiday/
Happy Holidays!!!
Grab the kids and head out to Boone Links Golf Course in Florence, KY. The Mike Parker Team/HUFF Realty will be offering FREE pictures with Santa and Mrs. Claus from 1 - 5 pm this Sunday, November 16, 2008!!!!
Directions: Rt. 18 W to left into Oakbrook, Left on Wynds Dr. Left into Boone Links Golf Course. Pictures will be taken in the Clubhouse!!
The following article was in the Columbus Dispatch on Saturday, May 31, 2008, written by Sarah Pulliam. It was forwarded to us by an attorney Terrance R. Monnie. He explains that if the buyer mentioned in this article "had purchased a title insurance policy the loss would not only have been covered but the insured buyers would have been provided with legal counsel to defend the claim."
Clerk's error jeopardizes family's home
Undetected lien against seller haunts buyer
Zanesville, Ohio - A spelling error by a government worker might cost Andy Mateja his house.
When he bought a home worth at least $400,000 for $320,000 in 2001, he thought it was a good deal. He moved in with his family of six and paid his mortgage on time, according to his records.
So he couldn't understand why the Muskingum County sheriffs office served him with foreclosure papers in August 2007.
"My wife literally broke down and cried. She thought we were going to lose the house," Mateja said. "If we were going to be evicted, I didn't know where we were going to turn."
When Mateja bought his house, he paid for a title search that found no liens on his property. It turns out what wasn't true.
JPMorgan Chase had placed a $150,000 lien on the house in 1998, when it was owned by Dr. Subbarayudu Koppera. But the lien was mistakenly entered into the public record under the name Koppera, so it did not not show up when the title company searched for liens by the owner's last name.
Muskingum County Recorder Karen Vincent, whose office made the spelling mistake, testified that a correction was made in 2006. Vincent told the Dispatch that to her knowledge, it was the first time an error has been made, but she declined to comment further.
In buying the house, Mateja did not take out title insurance that would have protected him from claims against a previous owner.
Now JPMorgan Chase is going after the Matejas' house. The Matejas have countersued the bank and Koppera. The case is scheduled to go to court June 19.
Tom Kelly, a spokesman for JPMorgan Chase, said that if the lien is paid off by Koppera, the bank will not pursue foreclosure. He declined to check how much Koppera has paid or whether there is an agreement to pay back the money, citing privacy issues.
"Our goal for all of this is to be paid what we're owed, and the security to that is the mortgage lien on that property," Kelly said. "Our preference is to be paid the money, not to own the house."
Former homeowner Koppera, 61, modified the lien in 2004, even though he no longer owned the house. Koppera, who bought a $682,000 house in New Albany is 2000, said he is paying the bank $2,000 each month on the lien of his former home.
"We are paying now. Somehow they got mad and they want everything." Koppera said of Chase.
Koppera, a kidney specialist, and his wife have faced numerous civil judgments for unpaid debts and federal, state and county tax liens for unpaid taxes.
He believes the title company made a mistake. "They should've known it and stopped right there so the lien was clear. Instead of me taking the cash, I would've paid the lien," Koppera said regarding the sale of the house. "They didn't do their job, and they should pay for it."
Koppera declined to comment further.
Mateja, a 53-year-old father of four, moved to his Zanesville home from Chicago. The four-bedroom, red-brick house sits on a manicured hill in a quiet neighborhood northwest of Zanesville.
He has incurred mounting costs since he left his job as vice president of sales for Robinson Ransbottom Pottery before the company went out of business in 2005. He worked as a consultant for two years before getting a full-time job in October with Gale Pacific.
Because he was struggling financially, he refinanced his mortgage in May 2007 at a higher interest rate in a loan that gave him extra cash. His lender would not give him an equity loan.
Then, he was hit with foreclosure papers, and he has incurred about $10,000 in legal bills since.
"My first inclination was, 'Do we just let them pull the plug and go rent?' We didn't want to try to rent, but we couldn't buy again if we had been foreclosed on," Mateja said. "It definitely put me into shock and put my wife into deep despair."
This article was written up in the KYPost and features our agent partner Peter Zimmer.
Web produced by: Jessica Noll
Fifteen people graduated from the 3rd Annual Kenton County Government Academy Monday evening.
State Rep. Arnold Simpson, D- Covington, was the featured keynote speaker. Kenton County Judge/Executive Ralph Drees also addressed the graduates.
The Kenton County Government Academy was created to give average citizens the opportunity to learn about how their local government works from the inside out.
Goals of this program are that citizens will become more involved with government related issues in Kenton County all the while fostering potential community leaders by equipping them with essential information to share with and answer questions from friends, relatives and neighbors.
Now, after completing a 40 hour program over the course of the last 12 weeks, these citizens graduated from the academy with honors.
Graduates include:
Jeremy Canter – Ft. Thomas
Jay Ficke – Covington
Joni Ficke – Edgewood
Holly Houillion – Covington
Brian Houillion – Covington
Barry Johnson – Covington
Beverly Naïve – Walton
Nataliya Parker – Walton
Scott Pennington – Independence
Joe Price – Crestview Hills
Nancy Ray – Covington
Gregory Scully – Burlington
Terry Mayo – Crestview Hills
William Wells – Covington
Peter Zimmer – Covington
Congratulations Peter on a job well done!!!!!
This article was written in the Chigago Tribune regarding what to do if you are running behind on your mortgage payments.....
Options exist for homeowners behind on their mortgage payments—if they act quickly. Lisle attorney Steven Bashaw and Michigan real estate broker Ralph Roberts offer these:
· A forbearance agreement may help borrowers with short-term financial problems, Roberts said. It’s a payment plan with a set pay-back period, and the bank will want proof you can live up to it. “If you owe $3,000 in back payments, for example, the bank may allow you to pay an extra $250 per month for 12 months,” he said.
· Reinstatement entails paying all past-due payments, costs and fees to bring the account current. This may be a good short-term solution, Roberts said, but homeowners have to make hard decisions about whether they can keep paying the loan in the long haul.
· Mortgage modification means working out a new loan, with many possible variations. The bank may agree to roll the amount owed in missed payments, penalties and interest into the total loan amount, for example, Roberts said. Or a modification might lower the interest rate or change the loan’s term.
· Sell the house in a timely manner, pay off the loan and fees, and end the problem, Roberts and Bashaw said.
· A short sale occurs when a lender agrees to take a loss by selling the house for less than the amount owed. “I don’t encounter those as much as you’d think,” Bashaw said. “They’re not the panacea that speculators and investors and real estate agents want you to think they are.”
· Bankruptcy. “It can give you more time to restructure your debt,” Roberts said. “Bankruptcy takes you off the market, the collection proceedings can’t keep going. The clock just stops running.” But it’s extreme, and a lender might get court approval to proceed with the foreclosure anyway, Roberts said. Plus, it poisons your credit-worthiness.
· Redemption. In Illinois, a foreclosed borrower has a certain amount of time after the house is sold at auction to redeem it by reimbursing the purchaser for the sale price and other costs.
· Rescue plans can come from all manner of folks. They are too varied to describe here—except to say that homeowners must be wary of scams.
Bottom line: Don’t sign a quit-claim deed to someone who says this will “fix your problem,” Roberts says. It may be a ruse to steal the house. Check with a lawyer before you sign.
This was originally posted by Ralph Roberts but we thought it was such great information, we just had to share it.
If you or someone you know is currently facing foreclosure, you have options, including:
1. You are not alone. Foreclosure knows no geographic, racial, ethnic, or socio-economic boundaries. We have seen real estate agents, attorneys, and others face foreclosure. Michael Jackson recently filed for bankruptcy. Foreclosure is much more prevalent than you think.
2. Most people facing foreclosure have at least a dozen options. (Many people falsely believe that they have only two options – pay up or move out.) You can reinstate the loan, refinance (consolidate debt), list the home for sale with an agent, sell to an investor (if you have insufficient time to list the property), offer a deed in lieu of foreclosure, declare bankruptcy, negotiate forbearance or a mortgage modification, to name several of the most common options.
3. Banks and other lending institutions do not want to foreclose. They make more money if you can make your payments. When they foreclose, they not only lose your monthly payments, but they also have the expense of foreclosing, rehabbing the home, and then selling it. In today’s market, there’s a good chance they’ll have to sell the home at a loss. This is all good news for you – it means the bank is highly motivated to make a deal with you.
4. Given the current mortgage crisis and resulting foreclosure epidemic, the federal government, your state government, and consumer protection advocacy groups have put more pressure on mortgage lenders and provided them with additional resources to help homeowners in distress. In a way, people facing foreclosure now may be in a much better position to avoid it than they would have been, say five years ago.
5. If you own the home with your spouse or life partner, tell them immediately. Far too many people try to keep their partner in the dark. Eventually, the person will find out. It’s always better if they find out from you earlier rather than from someone else when they have little or no time to do anything about it. Couples that work as a team almost always see much better results.
6. Call your lender – the sooner, the better. As soon as you stop making payments, the foreclosure clock starts ticking. The earlier you know your options, the more time you have to pursue those options.
One of my mentors Pat Zaby wrote this article in his newsletter and I thought I'd share it.
Email is definitely something that we can't do without and it is hard to imagine how the people who don't have it can even exist. It has become a standard like regular mail except used much more often.
It's always good to reexamine our techniques and procedures to see if there is room for improvement.
Email Tips
Setting up Outlook
Domain name
It seems like agents understand about the importance of obtaining your own domain name for a website but they don't understand that they can use it for their email too.
The overall objective is to have one email address that will never change for as long as you're in real estate. That way, once a person has your email, they'll always have your email.
Regardless of whether the agent changes companies or Internet Service Providers, if they are using their domain name for their email, it will never change. Promoting your name and business is hard enough without having to periodically promote your email address to make certain that potential clients can indeed get in touch with you.
Look at the example in the graphic that shows the agent's name as her website address but she isn't using it for her email.
If you are not comfortable making the changes that were discussed in this article, you need to find someone who can help you. It might be an IT person in your office. It might be a paid consultant. It could even be just a young person who could figure it out for you.
You don't need to be able to set it up yourself as long as someone does it for you. This is too important to leave undone. Email can be your most valuable tool and can go a long way to helping you achieve customer satisfaction which can lead to referrals and a long career.
Displaying blog entries 361-370 of 400