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Debt Recovery Newsletter
Topic:
GETTING
A LOAN: YOUR HOME AS SECURITY
If you need a personal loan and are thinking about using your
home as security, you should know about a credit law that
gives you extra time to reconsider the loan agreement. When
you use your home as collateral for a loan, you generally
have the right to cancel the credit transaction within three
business days. This is called your "right of rescission,"
and it is guaranteed by the Federal Truth in Lending Act. This is an important debt recovery tip to remember.
The right of rescission gives you three extra days to reconsider
whether you want to use your home to guarantee repayment for
a personal loan. The right applies even if your home is a
condominium, mobile home, or house boat, as long as it is
your principal residence. The right applies to certain
installment loans -- where you borrow a fixed amount and
repay the debt on an agreed payment schedule -- as well as
to home equity credit lines -- a form of revolving credit
in which your home serves as collateral. Rescission can be important for debt recovery, especially if you find a better deal elsewhere.
What Rescinding a Credit Transaction Means
Rescinding
a credit transaction means you are canceling the deal. In
other words, you decide that you do not want the loan or the
service being financed.
You can rescind the credit transaction within three days for
any reason. For example, you may find better credit terms,
such as a loan that offers a lower interest rate or does not
require the use of your home as collateral. If you find better terms, go for it! This will help you in your debt recovery pursuits.
How to Rescind a Credit Transaction
Unless
you waive your right of rescission, you have until midnight
of the third business day after the transaction to cancel
the contract. The first day after all three of the following
events occurs counts as Day One:
1. You sign the credit contract.
2. You receive a Truth in Lending disclosure form containing
certain important disclosures about the credit contract. These
disclosures explain the key terms of the credit being offered:
the annual percentage rate; the finance charge; the amount
financed; the total of payments; and the payment schedule.
3. You receive two copies of a notice explaining your right
to rescind.
You should be aware that for rescission purposes, business
days include Saturdays, but not Sundays or legal public
holidays. For example, if the last of the above three events
occurs on a Friday, you have until midnight on the following
Tuesday to rescind.
During this waiting period, your creditor should not take
any action on your transaction. For example, the creditor
should not give you the money from the loan or, if your are
dealing with a home improvement loan, the contractor should
not deliver any materials or start work.
If you decide to exercise your right of rescission, you must
notify the creditor in writing that you are canceling the
contract. You may use the form provided to you by the creditor,
a letter, or a telegram. Whatever form of written notice you
use, make sure it is delivered, mailed, or filed for telegraphic
transmission before midnight of the third business day. Remember
that you cannot rescind just by telephoning or visiting the creditor.
If you never receive the disclosures or the notice of rescission
from the creditor (see numbers 2 and 3 above), you can cancel
at any time during the first three years after you sign the
credit contract, or before you sell your home -- whichever
occurs first.
What Happens When You Rescind
Within 20 days after a creditor receives your notice of rescission,
all money or property you paid as part of the credit transaction
must be returned to you. The creditor also must release any
security interest in your home.
If you have received money or property (such as building materials)
from the creditor, keep it until the creditor proves that
your home is no longer being held as collateral and returns
any money you already have paid. For example, the creditor
may show you a release of a lien previously filed with your
city or county clerk's office to prove your house is no longer
collateral. You must then offer to return the creditor's money
or property. If the creditor does not claim the money or property
within 20 days, you may keep it.
Waiving Your Right to Rescind
Sometimes
you may have a financial emergency and not be able to wait
for the creditor to slow the loan process by suspending action
for three business days. For example, you may need to borrow
money quickly to have a damaged roof or house foundation repaired.
The law allows you to waive your right of rescission if you
have a "bona fide personal financial emergency." This enables
you to have the loan process speeded up to meet the emergency
situation. To avail yourself of this right, you must give
the creditor your own written statement (pre-printed forms
are not allowed) describing the emergency and clearly stating
that you are waiving your right to rescind. The statement
must be dated and signed by you and anyone else who shares
in the ownership of the home.
Consider your decisions carefully. If you waive your right
to rescind, you must go ahead with the credit transaction.
Typical Situations With No Right of Rescission
The
right of rescission does not apply in all cases where your
home is used as collateral for the loan. You do not have the
right of rescission when:
* you apply for a loan to purchase or build your principal
home;
* you consolidate or refinance with the same creditor a loan
that is already secured by your home, and no additional funds
are borrowed; or
* a state agency is the creditor for the loan.
Even in these cases, however, you may have cancellation or
"cooling-off" rights under state or local law.
Check back for more debt recovery tips!
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