Woman's House Mistakenly Auctioned by Bank 7
Anna Ramirez came home to find all her stuff on the lawn, the police chaining her door shut, and a stranger telling her that he had just bought her home for $87,000. Anna and her family have lived in the home for 3 years and had recently refinanced. Somehow there was a paperwork mishap at the Miami-Dade Clerk's Office and her house was put up for sale. The sale was reversed by a Miami-Dade judge two days later. "I have never seen anything like it. They literally threw all her stuff on the front lawn. I didn't sleep that night and it wasn't even my house," said neighbor Martha Taylor. I hope Anna got a really good rate on her refinance.
Woman's house, whose castle, whose mi$take (Score:2)
And one or two cops might not be enough. e.g. about 12 years ago, a manager for a Fortune 50 company got drunk (again), slapped the wife and before you know it, we had a 7-8 p
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"Chase" being a bank or something similar involved in this fiasco? But the BUYER needing to investigate the sale? I've never heard of such a thing happening at a public auction, and I can't think of any grounds for a buyer at a public auction to have doubts about someone's title to the goods on sale.
Actually, now that I think on it, I have heard of such things, but in respect of cars, not houses. And for cars t
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It could have been worse... (Score:2)
This could have happened instead:
http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/stories/2009/06/11/wrong_house_demolished.html [ajc.com]
Punitive Damages (Score:2)
If ever there were a reason for punitive damages...
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Punitive damages? It probably won't even go to court. Chances by now, that lady doesn't have a mortgage anymore and there's a mortgage loan officer asking if you want to upsize your combo for 60 cents.
Seriously, if the bank expects her to pay them one penny after this, they're full of it and deserve the lawsuit.