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Will You Add? - Statutory Disposition of Foreclosure Sale Proceeds
Flash - The Next Generation Integrated Development Environment tgages, in Indiana a judicial sale of personal property collateral is not required. Lenders may choose to conduct the sale privately, although it may make sense to group the personal property with any real estate that is being sold at a sheriff’s sale. I.C. § 26-1-9.1-615 governs how to apply the proceeds:Flash is an integrated development environment (IDE) that refers to the Flash Player, a virtual machine used to run or parse the Flash files, and the multimedia authoring program used to create the image, video, etc. Flash files are traditionally called "Flash movies" or "Flash games,” having .swf as a file extension and may be an object of a web page, a standalone Flash Player, or a self-executing Flash movie.A Flash Player includes the ActionScript Virtual Machine (AVM), a virtual machine for scripting interactivity at run-time, support 1. Sale Expenses. First, proceeds are applied to the reasonable expenses of retaking, holding, preparing for disposition and reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses incurred by the secured party. This would include payment of the sheriff’s fees if the civil sheriff is conducting the sale, or to private auctioneers upon a private sale. 2. The Debt. Second, payment goes to the satisfaction of the obligation secured by t Need Debt Consolidation? - How To Do It With A Cash Out Mortgage When foreclosing on a borrower’s loan collateral, it’s no secret that banks and commercial lending institutions ultimately are seeking money. Normally, they hope to dispose of the collateral and, ideally, become whole from the proceeds of the sale. A senior lienholder will obtain most, but not all, of any such proceeds. In Indiana, statutes govern specifically who gets the cash.Taking care of your debts can be done rather quickly by getting a cash out mortgage. A cash out mortgage is actually a first mortgage and it will require you to refinance your existing one. There are some real advantages by doing it this way - such as getting the lowest interest rate for any loan. Here is how you can go about getting that new mortgage for you debt consolidation.A cash out mortgage allows you to get the equity out of your home's equity by refinancing your first mortgage, which pays that off, and by adding to the loan the a Mortgages. Ind. Code § 32-30-10 outlines the procedures for mortgage foreclosure actions. The distribution of proceeds from a judicial sale are statutorily mandated. First Federal Savings Bank v. Hartley, 799 N.E.2d 36, 40 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003). According to I.C. § 32-30-10-14, which should be used as a template when preparing the section of any proposed foreclosure decree/order dealing with the disposition of sheriff’s sale proceeds, the money must be applied as follows: 1. Sale expenses. The first payout is to the civil sheriff for its fees and notice/advertising costs. A sheriff’s sale in Indiana costs a few hundred dollars. Under certain circumstances, Indiana law allows a mortgage foreclosure sale to be conducted by a private auctioneer, and the fees of the auctioneer would be a part of this payout. 2. Property taxes. Second, real estate taxes that are due and owing for the property being sold must be paid. The sheriff is required to transfer the amounts collected to the county treasurer ten days after the sale. This eliminates the need to name the county or the county treasurer in the foreclosure suit. (If there are other tax-related liens on the property, the taxing authority must be named as a defendant so that it can answer as to its interests.) When assessing what might be recovered after a sale, pay attention to what the title work says about delinquent real estate taxes. 3. The Debt. The payment of the outstanding principal, interest and costs to the senior lienholder comes third. This almost always will be the full, accelerated debt as articulated in the judgment. 4. Junior Liens. Any payments of amounts owed to any junior lienholders are next, in accordance with their legal priority. 5. Borrower. Lastly, if any sale proceeds remain, that surplus must be paid to the Clerk of the Court to be transferred as the Court directs, usually back to the borrower. Security Interests. The disposition of collateral under Indiana’s UCC, Article 9.1 (Secured Transactions), is slightly different and will depend upon the nature of the collateral. Article 9.1 should be reviewed in detail for each specific case and the particular collateral in question, because there are many different rules that could apply. With certain collateral (accounts receivable, for instance), disposition by sale normally will not occur. On the other hand, sales of tangible personal property collateral, like inventory or equipment, are common. I.C. § 26-1-9.1-610 speaks to disposing of collateral after default. Unlike with mortgages, in Indiana a judicial sale of personal property collateral is not required. Lenders may choose to conduct the sale privately, although it may make sense to group the personal property with any real estate that is being sold at a sheriff’s sale. I.C. § 26-1-9.1-615 governs how to apply the proceeds: 1. Sale Expenses. First, proceeds are applied to the reasonable expenses of retaking, holding, preparing for disposition and reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses incurred by the secured party. This would include payment of the sheriff’s fees if the civil sheriff is conducting the sale, or to private auctioneers upon a private sale. 2. The Debt. Second, payment goes to the satisfaction of the obligation secured by th Offshore Banking: What You Need to Know Before Opening an Account ed foreclosure decree/order dealing with the disposition of sheriff’s sale proceeds, the money must be applied as follows:Offshore banking, we have all heard about it before. Unfortunately, many are misinformed when it comes to offshore banking. We have all heard news reports of offshore accounts being used to front illegal activities or to avoid taxes. In fact, we have also seen it in the movies, being used a similar way. This has led many individuals to believe that offshore banking is illegal. Despite what you may believe, offshore banking is legal. However, how you use it may be considered illegal.Offshore banking is done through a bank that is know 1. Sale expenses. The first payout is to the civil sheriff for its fees and notice/advertising costs. A sheriff’s sale in Indiana costs a few hundred dollars. Under certain circumstances, Indiana law allows a mortgage foreclosure sale to be conducted by a private auctioneer, and the fees of the auctioneer would be a part of this payout. 2. Property taxes. Second, real estate taxes that are due and owing for the property being sold must be paid. The sheriff is required to transfer the amounts collected to the county treasurer ten days after the sale. This eliminates the need to name the county or the county treasurer in the foreclosure suit. (If there are other tax-related liens on the property, the taxing authority must be named as a defendant so that it can answer as to its interests.) When assessing what might be recovered after a sale, pay attention to what the title work says about delinquent real estate taxes. 3. The Debt. The payment of the outstanding principal, interest and costs to the senior lienholder comes third. This almost always will be the full, accelerated debt as articulated in the judgment. 4. Junior Liens. Any payments of amounts owed to any junior lienholders are next, in accordance with their legal priority. 5. Borrower. Lastly, if any sale proceeds remain, that surplus must be paid to the Clerk of the Court to be transferred as the Court directs, usually back to the borrower. Security Interests. The disposition of collateral under Indiana’s UCC, Article 9.1 (Secured Transactions), is slightly different and will depend upon the nature of the collateral. Article 9.1 should be reviewed in detail for each specific case and the particular collateral in question, because there are many different rules that could apply. With certain collateral (accounts receivable, for instance), disposition by sale normally will not occur. On the other hand, sales of tangible personal property collateral, like inventory or equipment, are common. I.C. § 26-1-9.1-610 speaks to disposing of collateral after default. Unlike with mortgages, in Indiana a judicial sale of personal property collateral is not required. Lenders may choose to conduct the sale privately, although it may make sense to group the personal property with any real estate that is being sold at a sheriff’s sale. I.C. § 26-1-9.1-615 governs how to apply the proceeds: 1. Sale Expenses. First, proceeds are applied to the reasonable expenses of retaking, holding, preparing for disposition and reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses incurred by the secured party. This would include payment of the sheriff’s fees if the civil sheriff is conducting the sale, or to private auctioneers upon a private sale. 2. The Debt. Second, payment goes to the satisfaction of the obligation secured by t What the **Bleep** Do You Know About Workplace Attitude? county treasurer in the foreclosure suit. (If there are other tax-related liens on the property, the taxing authority must be named as a defendant so that it can answer as to its interests.) When assessing what might be recovered after a sale, pay attention to what the title work says about delinquent real estate taxes.Go to Your Nearest Video StoreA new movie is now on DVD entitled "What the *Bleep* Do We Know?". If you haven't already seen it, here is the web site http://whatthebleep.com/ Among other things it's about how attitude makes a HUGE difference to human effectiveness on all levels. Besides that -- the movie is very entertaining. Your attitude vastly affects your bio-chemistry -- which in turn can make or break your relationships with customers, suppliers, co-workers, bosses, computers, time deadlines, inner dilemmas, family, everything. 3. The Debt. The payment of the outstanding principal, interest and costs to the senior lienholder comes third. This almost always will be the full, accelerated debt as articulated in the judgment. 4. Junior Liens. Any payments of amounts owed to any junior lienholders are next, in accordance with their legal priority. 5. Borrower. Lastly, if any sale proceeds remain, that surplus must be paid to the Clerk of the Court to be transferred as the Court directs, usually back to the borrower. Security Interests. The disposition of collateral under Indiana’s UCC, Article 9.1 (Secured Transactions), is slightly different and will depend upon the nature of the collateral. Article 9.1 should be reviewed in detail for each specific case and the particular collateral in question, because there are many different rules that could apply. With certain collateral (accounts receivable, for instance), disposition by sale normally will not occur. On the other hand, sales of tangible personal property collateral, like inventory or equipment, are common. I.C. § 26-1-9.1-610 speaks to disposing of collateral after default. Unlike with mortgages, in Indiana a judicial sale of personal property collateral is not required. Lenders may choose to conduct the sale privately, although it may make sense to group the personal property with any real estate that is being sold at a sheriff’s sale. I.C. § 26-1-9.1-615 governs how to apply the proceeds: 1. Sale Expenses. First, proceeds are applied to the reasonable expenses of retaking, holding, preparing for disposition and reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses incurred by the secured party. This would include payment of the sheriff’s fees if the civil sheriff is conducting the sale, or to private auctioneers upon a private sale. 2. The Debt. Second, payment goes to the satisfaction of the obligation secured by t Catalog Management: In-house or Out-sourced? o the Clerk of the Court to be transferred as the Court directs, usually back to the borrower.Many organizations face the dilemma of whether to manage their inventory Catalog in-house or to out-source the function to an external provider. Should you tackle the challenges involved in creating or honing your in-house Catalog team to handle the job? Or should you step back and manage the relationship with an external expert who provides those services, tailored to your needs? The decision is not such an obvious one; there are several issues to be considered.Managing data integrity is a full time job, if it’s done right. Many orga Security Interests. The disposition of collateral under Indiana’s UCC, Article 9.1 (Secured Transactions), is slightly different and will depend upon the nature of the collateral. Article 9.1 should be reviewed in detail for each specific case and the particular collateral in question, because there are many different rules that could apply. With certain collateral (accounts receivable, for instance), disposition by sale normally will not occur. On the other hand, sales of tangible personal property collateral, like inventory or equipment, are common. I.C. § 26-1-9.1-610 speaks to disposing of collateral after default. Unlike with mortgages, in Indiana a judicial sale of personal property collateral is not required. Lenders may choose to conduct the sale privately, although it may make sense to group the personal property with any real estate that is being sold at a sheriff’s sale. I.C. § 26-1-9.1-615 governs how to apply the proceeds: 1. Sale Expenses. First, proceeds are applied to the reasonable expenses of retaking, holding, preparing for disposition and reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses incurred by the secured party. This would include payment of the sheriff’s fees if the civil sheriff is conducting the sale, or to private auctioneers upon a private sale. 2. The Debt. Second, payment goes to the satisfaction of the obligation secured by t Relationship Building for Long-term Repeat Business tgages, in Indiana a judicial sale of personal property collateral is not required. Lenders may choose to conduct the sale privately, although it may make sense to group the personal property with any real estate that is being sold at a sheriff’s sale. I.C. § 26-1-9.1-615 governs how to apply the proceeds:Most business owners, along with most salespeople, understand the value of relationship building in securing customer loyalty and consistent long-term repeat business. Unfortunately, many are not aware of the 'cornerstone technique' that must be present to sustain this ongoing loyalty.It forms part of, the all important, integrity issue. I am not referring to what most people consider when the think of integrity, which is often equated with 'honestly'. However, it is very closely related. I am referring t 1. Sale Expenses. First, proceeds are applied to the reasonable expenses of retaking, holding, preparing for disposition and reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses incurred by the secured party. This would include payment of the sheriff’s fees if the civil sheriff is conducting the sale, or to private auctioneers upon a private sale. 2. The Debt. Second, payment goes to the satisfaction of the obligation secured by the security interest. 3. Junior Liens. The third payment, if any, would be for the satisfaction of the obligation secured by any subordinate security interest. 4. Debtor. Finally, any remaining proceeds go to the debtor. So, if and to the extent there are cash proceeds from an Indiana foreclosure sale of loan collateral, the debt of the plaintiff lender will not be satisfied until after the sale-related expenses are reimbursed and, in cases of a mortgage, any real estate taxes due and owing are paid. Also, lenders never will receive a windfall from a sale because the debtor generally receives any surplus, which is a remote possibility anyway.
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