Archive for February, 2009

Cramdown Bankruptcy Bill Uncertain to Help Homeowners

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Relief for Riverside County homeowners under President Obama’s cramdown bill is far from certain.  Today there is an indication that leading Republican representatives, mortgage industry trade groups and mortgage lenders have joined forces to oppose relief for homeowners provided by the cramdown bill expected to be introduced Thursday of this week.  If Republic representatives and mortgage lenders successfully oppose the Democrat-led relief effort, Riverside County bankruptcy attorney practitioners will not have the additional relief offered and will only have limited ability to help homeowners reduce their mortgage debt in bankruptcy.

From the Hill online:

“The financial services industry and House Republicans are fighting back against a bill pushed by House Democrats that would empower bankruptcy judges to write down mortgage interest rates and principal.

The bill could be up for a vote on Thursday and is part of a broader effort to invigorate the housing market and re-brand a federal program begun last year to reduce foreclosures that has had scant results…

The industry says the bill is “overly broad” in allowing too many homeowners to head to bankruptcy courts; it also does not limit the size of a mortgage that can be reduced.

“The housing market is already unstable and enacting cramdown legislation would make things worse by adding even more risk to the mortgage market, effectively undermining efforts by Congress and the administration to stabilize the housing market,” said a dozen trade associations in a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio).

The American Bankers Association, Mortgage Bankers Association and Financial Services Roundtable sent individual letters on Monday to Congress and the administration.”

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Legislation on Bankruptcy Judges Modifying Loans Introduced

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

Riverside County and San Bernardino County bankruptcy attorneys will be able to help save the homes of more of their bankruptcy clients, if the new Bankruptcy Bill introduced in Congress today is passed.

Press Release from the House Financial Services today:

“The House Judiciary Committee and the House Financial Services Committee today released details of the combined housing bill the House may consider this week. The measure will combine the Judiciary Committee provisions to allow bankruptcy judges to modify mortgages on primary residences, and the Financial Services Committee legislation which provides a servicer safe harbor, Hope for Homeowners improvements, FHA changes, and reforms to the FDIC insurance fund. The new bill, H.R. 1106 could be on the floor as early as this week.”

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Obama’s New Housing Plan Doesn’t Address Bankruptcy Law

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

Although President Obama’s new housing plan may be “loaded with incentives for homeowners, mortgage servicers, lenders and banks” to modify the loans that are leading so many Riverside County residents to foreclosure and bankruptcy, what the plan does not do is address the so-called “cramdown” proposal — that Bankruptcy judges be allowed to modify home loans. This change in bankruptcy law would be a boon for the clients of Riverside County bankruptcy attorneys; it would help many Chapter 7 bankruptcy clients keep their homes. This is not only an issue for homes in Riverside and San Bernardino County areas like Corona and Chino, but also in higher income areas like Rancho Cucamonga, where homes with high mortgage payments have been forcing even high income earners into seeking a bankruptcy attorney or leading to foreclosure. The best that can be said about this housing plan, at least with regard to bankruptcy law, is that it does not “rule out” the possibility that a future bill might tackle this issue.

Riverside County has been waiting for such a bill for a long time and it looks like the wait shall continue…

Going Down? Elevator Music Company Files for Bankruptcy

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

This is one bankruptcy that Riverside County residents may be ambivalent about, depending on their taste in music.  Musak, whose music fills elevators and “on hold” messages for phone systems, is filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Apparently, the global economic crisis that has led many Riverside County residents to seek a bankruptcy attorney is not the culprit this time. Musak’s CEO said that debt from a decade ago is the true source of their need to file for bankruptcy protection.

From CNN online:

“Muzak, the company that put pop, string-filled arrangements of rock songs in your elevator, filed bankruptcy papers Tuesday after it missed a $105 million payment to creditors.

The pipeline of easy listening will continue to flow as Muzak restructures its debt during the Chapter 11 process, the company said.

“Muzak is a solid business with an outstanding customer base, but we are burdened with substantial debt obligations established over a decade ago,” Muzak CEO Stephen Villa said.

Muzak’s cash flows doubled in the last three years, Villa said, “demonstrating that our business continues to perform well even in today’s challenging environment.”

Along with its ubiquitous elevator offerings, Muzak and its 14 affiliates — all privately owned — produce on-hold messages and install sound systems, digital signs and drive-thru systems for retail businesses.

Bankruptcy documents showed Muzak owes its largest creditor — U.S. Bank, as indentured trustee — about $370 million, nearly all of it due this year.

Muzak spokeswoman Meaghan Repko said the filing was voluntary and in cooperation with the creditors.

The weakened global economy was not a factor, she said, noting the company’s profits have been rising in recent years.

The Chapter 11 protections will allow Muzak time to restructure the debt, which was incurred a decade ago, she said.”

Riverside County, with cities such as Corona and Riverside that abound with commercial buildings and offices, has many elevators and phones that have been using Musak for years.

Couple Who Struck it Rich in Real Estate Forced into Bankruptcy

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dyson have been forced into bankruptcy.  According to their bankruptcy attorney, the real estate market’s dismal state during this economic crisis was the culprit.  As news about record foreclosures and bankruptcies in Riverside and San Bernardino County cities such as Corona, Rancho Cucamonga, and Riverside, it is not too surprising that the real estate market that had given so much, ended up taking away as much as it gave.

From the North County Times online article:

“A couple who made a name and fortune in high-class coastal real estate have crashed into bankruptcy and are asking a court to erase more than $40 million in debt, including $625,000 that stemmed from alleged misuse of a helicopter loan.

According to court filings, property records and interviews, the couple, Robert and Loraine Dyson, shut down their Solana Beach real estate brokerage, an affiliate of Sotheby’s International Realty, in October. They also filed for personal bankruptcy and have apparently scotched plans to develop an equestrian resort and estates in central Riverside County…

The Dysons’ financial unraveling was as spectacular as their ambition. The couple own a $7 million estate in Rancho Santa Fe and —- until recently —- several other residences in the most exclusive areas of the Southern California coast and the San Jacinto Mountains.

Press releases from their real estate agency reported billions of dollars of annual sales. Their charitable foundation parceled out tens of thousands of dollars.

The Dysons’ slide into bankruptcy followed an attempt to transform themselves from high-end real estate agents into high-end developers at what may have been the worst possible time.

They put some $30 million into property in the foothills of the San Jacinto Mountains starting in late 2005, with plans for equestrian estates that would eventually ramble over nearly 2,500 acres…

They filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy on Oct. 30, estimating their debts at $50 million to $100 million and their assets at $1 million to $10 million. A debtor who qualifies for Chapter 7 can usually keep a car and other necessities, subject to limits on their value; other assets are sold off to cover portions of the debt, and the remaining debt is wiped away.

The trustee supervising their bankruptcy recommended in December that the couple abandon the Rancho Santa Fe home that they bought in June 2005 because debt and liens account for nearly its entire $7 million value. A later filing by the trustee recommended they give up a $90,000 leased Porsche sports car and their $3.2 million home in Palm Desert, which is in foreclosure…”

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Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Filings in Inland Empire for January 2009

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

The search for an Riverside County or San Bernardino bankruptcy attorney to file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy was made by hundreds of Inland Empire residents each and every month in 2008. This year looks like more of the same, and possibly much more of the same.  In January 2009, there were at least 1,120 Riverside and San Bernardino County residents who required a bankruptcy attorney to file for Chapter 7 on their be half.

The Inland Empire cities with the most Chapter 7 bankruptcy filings for January, 2009 are as follows:

Corona, Fontana, Moreno Valley, Murrieta, Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga, Riverside, San Bernardino, Temecula, and Victorville.

Other Riverside and San Bernardino County cities that also had a high number, especially considering their relative population, include Chino, Lake Elsinore, and Rialto.