Can Foreclosure Investing Be Criminal?
By William Bronchick, Esq.
I recently attended a
"free" seminar on how to "get rich
quick" in foreclosures. The speaker had a different angle
than the usual "steal it from the homeowner" method.
The
speaker suggested that you approach the homeowner with the
following plan:
1) Tell the homeowner you will make up his
back payments and give him some cash.
2) Take title to the property.
3) Lease it back to the former owner with
an option to buy it back for one year.
The speaker suggested that after one year,
the house would be yours if the former owner didn't exercise his
option. Sounds great doesn't it? You could beat out all your
competition who are trying to "steal" the same house.
Well, here's the catch. The poor homeowner
in foreclosure will be your best friend when you make up his back
payments. However, when the year is up and he can't get his house
back, the trouble will begin.
In a number of cases, these homeowners will
go to court and claim that the "sale/leaseback" was
really just a disguised loan. He or his attorney will ask the
court to "re-characterize" the transaction as a loan and
place title to the property back in his name (for an in-depth
discussion of sale/leaseback re-characterizations, read "How
to Structure Sale-Leaseback Transactions"). If the court
agrees, the loan is illegal, since it is usurious.
Here's how it works: Let's say that you find
a house in foreclosure worth $100k. The balance of the loan $50k,
and the homeowner is behind $5k. You agree to make up the back
payments of $5k and take title. You then lease it back to the
homeowner with an option to buy it back for $100k, its fair market
value. What's the problem?
The problem is that if the court
re-characterizes the transaction from a sale/leaseback to a loan,
you have loaned the homeowner $5k at 1000% interest! Think about
it . . . you give him $5k, and he has to pay $50k ($100k option
price minus the $50k loan balance) to get his equity back. 1000%
interest is usury, and the court will set aside the loan. You will
lose the house AND your $5k.
If you're not familiar with the word
"usury," it means charging more interest than permitted
by law. The consequences of a usurious loan are usually civil; the
court will declare the loan void and the borrower won't have to
pay it back. If you get caught making usurious loans on a regular
basis, you'll be hearing the words "loan-sharking" and
"racketeering." These are CRIMINAL acts that will get
you in jail. Many foreclosure real estate investors have been
indicted on racketeering charges for doing exactly what I
described above.
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