Originally posted by Apache
I am told that there have been several occupants of said residence but they could have been renting the property from this person. I do know that, in the summons, this person (Dude), bought the property in early 2001. Whether a legal document was obtained or not, I am unaware.
PS. To make clear. Plaintiff (Bank) in the summons is NOT the bank that foreclosed on my sister-in-law.
Ok, so I think what happened was:
Sister defaulted on loan agreement to Bank. Bank went to auction and sold to Dude, who obtained financing from a second bank ("Bank2"). Since it appears that Dude had rented the property, I'm going to assume that he did take possession after purchasing from Bank and did enter legal rental agreements with tenants, which would prove that Sister was released from her interest in the property by Bank. Dude then defaulted on loan agreement with Bank2 and now Bank2 is foreclosing on Dude.
How Sister got involved sounds like a title search company simply pulled the names of the last 2 owners and gave the information to Bank2. With the foreclosure by Bank, the Bank assumed the liabilities of the property, thereby discharging Sister of her responsibilities, when Bank took title and sold same to Dude.
Sister can get out of the proceedings by simply filing a response with the court clerk that she no longer has any interest (control, title, ownership, liens, what have you) in the property and include an order that the judge can sign to that effect.
And, being the cop you are, you can run a check for warrants on all of them.
