Can I stop foreclosure in Virginia without filing bankruptcy? Two or three people a day call my office with that question.
It’s really hard. On Christmas eve, the Washington Post wrote about how Virginia puts home owners on a “fast track to foreclosure.” Like in most of its laws, Virginia foreclosure law favours the banks, not the consumers.
Still there are a handful of real lawyers–beware of scammers!–who try to fight foreclosure under the very unfavourable law we have here.
Dena Roudybush, of Compliance Counsel, is the one I know best. I talked her quite a bit when she first switched over from representing mortgage companies and went to the consumer side. I had a long talk with her again during the holiday. Here’s what I found out.

Virginia stop foreclosure lawyer Dena Roudybush
1. You have no chance if the same mortgage company has owned your loan all along. The more times it’s been sold, the better chance you have.
2. You also have no chance if they recorded their paperwork at the county courthouse. Many states require that the county land records be updated every time your mortgage is sold. Virginia allows it. If they did, Dena thinks she can’t beat them. If they didn’t, you have some chance.
3. A lot depends on the deed of trust trustee. In theory, the trustee on the mortgage is supposed to be an independent party. an indepedent party in charge of turning over your house to the proper owner. Which you say is you.
In practice, most of them are just foreclosure lawyers. Dena says Samuel White is something of an exception. If the challenges a foreclosure sale, Samuel White will put the sale on hold until he has re-checked the paperwork. Most of the others just go right ahead.
4. You may have to fight an eviction. While you are battling with the mortgage company in court, the Virginia court will allow the foreclosure sale to go through. Then, while you are still in court, the mortgage company will be trying to evict you.
5. It’s expensive–depending on how you look at it. Dena has a monthly fee of half whatever your mortgage was. That’s a lot. Since you are otherwise living for free, it’s also bargain, of course. Probably less than what you’d be paying in rent. (If you do end up getting a loan mod, those months you didn’t pay will probably be added to the end of your loan. If you hope to have equity in the house some day, you’ve made yourself further upside down.)
6. Sometimes they offer to settle with a loan mod. If their paperwork is really a mess, the mortgage company will compromise and give you a loan mod.
7. Sometimes they won’t. If they can prove they are the owners of your mortgage, then you lose. Foreclosed and evicted. We have very conservative judges in Virginia, but even here they read the newspapers. Your chances are a lot better than they were a year ago.
What’s my recommendation as a bankruptcy lawyer? If the first mortgage on your house is your only problem, then go for it. If there’s a second mortgage, or if the credit cards got out of control while you struggled to save the house, you should think seriously about filing bankruptcy first.
Why? If you are over the median income–$85,000 for a family of four–you have a good chance of being eligible to file Chapter 7 bankruptcy if you have a big house payment. If you are renting, then you probably don’t. (Specific factors, like high medical bills or child care expenses could affect that.)
If you fight the foreclosure (without bankruptcy) and lose, you now don’t have a house payment. But you would still owe the second mortgage. and in most cases, the bankruptcy court would make you keep paying for five more years before you can get rid of that debt.
If you file bankruptcy while you are still in the house, and then try to fight the foreclosure in court, if you lose the bankruptcy still protects you. You can start over fresh, not owing anybody any money. (Keeping in mind that under either plan you have to pay the home owners association.)
If you fight the foreclosure in court without a bankruptcy, and you lose, your debts are still out there. You still owe the deficiency on the mortgage–although they often never bother. You still owe the second mortgage–and you can count on them suing you. And you still owe the credit cards, if you have any. And there’s a good chance you have wrecked your eligibility to file bankruptcy. You’ll be carrying that debt load for a long time.
One more thing. Del Bob Marshall, Republican of Manassas, has put in a bill in this year’s Virginia General Assembly, to give home owners a few more protections. He deserves thanks for standing up to the big boys.