
"The issue stemmed from the 2008 housing crisis when lenders filed and later dropped thousands of foreclosure cases, often allowing the six-year limitations period to expire. As a result, many lenders later attempted to file new foreclosure actions on the same loans, arguing that earlier cases did not properly trigger the statute of limitations because the wrong party brought the case or because the loan was not validly accelerated."
"The Court of Appeals rejected these arguments, pointing to language in the statute stating that the law shall take effect immediately and applies to all foreclosure actions without an enforced final judgment. The court also said applying the law retroactively is constitutional, noting that lenders were responsible for the timing and handling of prior cases. The rulings are expected to have significant implications for foreclosure litigation in New York, with homeowners now having stronger protections against old or repeated foreclosure attempts."
"These decisions are a huge win for New York homeowners who, for too long, have been preyed upon by lenders seeking to manipulate the statute of limitations and relitigate foreclosure actions that have long been dismissed or abandoned, said Jacob Inwald, director of litigation-economic justice at Legal Services NYC. Governor Hochul and state legislators wisely closed the loophole that allowed lenders to refile time-barred foreclosure actions by passing the Foreclosure Abuse Prevention Act and the Court of Appeals correctly reinforced the law's protections, he added."
FAPA passed in 2022 prevents lenders from repeatedly pursuing foreclosure on the same debt when prior actions expired under the six-year statute of limitations. The problem arose after the 2008 housing crisis when lenders filed and later dropped thousands of foreclosure cases, often letting limitations periods expire. Lenders attempted to refile, claiming earlier filings failed to trigger the statute. The Court of Appeals rejected those claims, citing statutory language that the law takes effect immediately and applies to all foreclosure actions without an enforced final judgment. The court upheld retroactive application, emphasizing lender responsibility. Homeowners gain stronger protections; lenders must ensure proper legal steps and documentation before refiling.
#foreclosure-litigation #statute-of-limitations #foreclosure-abuse-prevention-act-fapa #homeowner-protections
Read at www.housingwire.com
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]