Re: Please help mortgage lender is trying to repossess my BTL and I am not in arrears!
You should write to the lender and ask them to consent to an adjournment of the hearing listed for December while you both await the outcome of the FOS investigation. Tell the lender that if they don't agree you will be making an application to the court for an adjournment and will also be seeking a costs order against them. If they do agree then formalise that with the court. If they don't agree then make an application to the court for an adjournment.
Tell the FOS there is a hearing date and ask for your complaint to be fast-tracked. They can do this if they want. They can also ask a lender to hold off proceedings while they investigate although the lender is not obliged to consent to this.
You won't be homeless because you have children and your local authority has a statutory obligation to re-house you in the event of repossession and eviction.
If your mortgage payments are up to date and the lender is repossessing you on the grounds of breach of contract for living in a BLT then have you not considered the option to move out? If the property is no longer with the LPA Receiver then how could the lender possibly evict any tenants who move in now. It was different when the property was in receivership when they did have the right to get rid of the tenants to sell the property. That was a different legal situation wasn't it?
Originally posted by Psg2008
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Tell the FOS there is a hearing date and ask for your complaint to be fast-tracked. They can do this if they want. They can also ask a lender to hold off proceedings while they investigate although the lender is not obliged to consent to this.
You won't be homeless because you have children and your local authority has a statutory obligation to re-house you in the event of repossession and eviction.
If your mortgage payments are up to date and the lender is repossessing you on the grounds of breach of contract for living in a BLT then have you not considered the option to move out? If the property is no longer with the LPA Receiver then how could the lender possibly evict any tenants who move in now. It was different when the property was in receivership when they did have the right to get rid of the tenants to sell the property. That was a different legal situation wasn't it?
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