small iat logo
Issue #35 July 27th, 2009
Your Bi-Weekly Newsflash from
small iat logo
A quick dash of news you need to hear
 
In This Issue
Banks Hold REOs to Keep Prices Up
Judge Charged with Mtg Fraud
Do Banks Hold Back REOs to Keep Prices Up?
On the surface, South Florida's home prices appear to be bottoming out, but a dip in the number of bank-owned properties for sale is leading analysts to conclude that lenders may be slowing the flow of foreclosures to the market as a way of stanching further price declines.

Monthly numbers from the Florida Association of Realtors show that South Florida existing-home sales continued to rise in June, as bank-owned homes and short-sales attracted bargain hunters from across the country. Figures released Thursday showed single-family home sales were up by 54 percent in Miami-Dade and 35 percent in Broward, compared to last year.

Median single-family home prices were down again since June of last year, falling 28 percent in Miami-Dade and 33 percent in Broward. But they have strengthened from April prices. The median price is the point at which half the homes sold for more and half for less.

The apparent leveling out of prices is being attributed to two things: (1) a shrinking number of distressed homes entering the market; and (2) a larger share of high-priced homes changing hands, according to real-estate analysts and brokers.

Read on...
Former Fla. Appeals Judge Charged with Mortgage Fraud Case
In a sad day for a man who made history as the first black graduate of Stetson University's law school and the first black judge in his county's circuit court, a former Florida appellate judge was criminally charged today with mortgage fraud.

The filing in federal court in Tampa also includes a plea agreement in which Thomas Stringer Sr. is to plead guilty to one count of bank fraud, reports the St. Petersburg Times. The case has nothing to do with his work on the Hillsborough County Circuit Court bench and the 2nd District Court of Appeal, according to the U.S. Attorney's office.

Although the charge carries a maximum sentence of 30 years, it appears unlikely that Stringer would be sentenced to any prison time because the loan has been repaid in full, the newspaper reports. It concerns a Hawaii investment home he reportedly purchased with a stripper with whom he has been friendly for well over a decade; Stringer is accused of falsely stating on a loan application that no one else was providing a down payment when in fact an unidentified third party allegedly did.

Read on...
Mortgage Calculator
small logo gif
4351 Gunn Highway
813-931-0840
Chicago Title Suit Warns Lawyers About Relying on Title Reports

An unusual lawsuit filed against a veteran New Jersey real estate attorney by a major title insurance company has caused fellow practitioners to sit up and take notice.

Although the suit was dismissed and it appears that the defendant attorney, Albert Birchwale, did nothing wrong, the Chicago Title Insurance Co. malpractice claim points to a possible pitfall for unwary practitioners in unrelated transactions, reports the New Jersey Law Journal.

Relying on a clean bill of health for a Cliffside Park six-unit apartment building from both a current and former title report, Birchwale helped a client close on the purchase of the building. However, unbeknownst to everyone involved in the transaction, a previous seller had failed to pay estate tax on the building, the legal publication recounts.

Chicago Title contended in the now-dismissed suit that Birchwale should have noted in the title report that a prior sale within the past 10 years was an estate and looked for definitive documentation from the Internal Revenue Service that estate tax had been paid by the previous seller.

Such IRS documentation reportedly did not exist in this case: The previous seller, who has been accused of fraud, allegedly certified himself that no estate tax was due on the property.

Article source can be accessed here.

I hope you enjoyed this newsletter. 

Sincerely Yours
 

 
Michael C. Blickensderfer, Esq. 
small logo gif 
 
This excerpt is not meant to substitute for legal advice.  If you have a legal question, please contact our office and speak with an attorney. 
Join Our Mailing List
Links to our Website: