Special Circumstances

Pages35-41
Special Circumstances
Chapter 7
35
Sometimes your clients will possess certain characteristics that dis-
tinguish them from the ordinary foreclosure defendant, such as a
homeowner working to save his homestead property. Sometimes
your client may not live in the property at all, or even be the home-
owner of the property. Sometimes your client may not have ex-
ecuted the traditional mortgage, as there are increasing numbers of
foreclosures that deal with reverse mortgages. Following are some
examples of special circumstances that may describe your clients
and that may change their available rights and the ideal strategy for
those cases.
MilitaryStatus
The Soldiers’ and Sailors’Civil Relief Act of 1940 (Civil ReliefAct)
protects homeowners in the military from losing their homes to fore-
closure without certain conditions being met by the bank.1The Civil
Relief Act is intended to assist service members in devoting “their
entire energy to the defense needs of the Nation” and serves to tem-
porarily suspend “legal proceedings and transactions which may preju-
dice the civil rights of such service members.2The Civil Relief Act
1. See 50 U.S.C.S.App. § 501 et seq.
2. Sylph,42 F. Supp. 354–56 (E.D.N.Y. 1941).

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