California Governor Signs Important Short Sale Bill

The California Senate passed SB306 today…Expediting the Short Sale process

So the question is “what does this means to home owners and the Short Sale process.

  1. If the Realtor is working with an escrow officer who has prepared a HUD1 the Lenders or Service Companies must either deny a Short Sale offer in 4 days from receiving the offer or it is assumed to be “accepted.”
  2. Lenders and Service Companies doing business in the State of California are mandated to respond to a Short Sale offer in 21 days.

This is great news, because one of the major strikes against the Short Sale is the time it takes to process…often time upwards of 120+ Days.

I have been anticipating that Government needed to get involved in the Short Sale practice as it is becoming more the mainstay in the state of California as with many other states.

I’m not sure next steps however; it is a step in the right direction.

Jeremy Smiley
Realtor
Certified Short Sale Specialist
London Properties
(559)790-8760

2 Responses to California Governor Signs Important Short Sale Bill

  1. Pingback: RealtyDoctor.us » California Governor Signs Important Short Sale Bill

  2. UPDATE: CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS
    Recently enacted Senate Bill 306 does not require lenders to review short sale requests from sellers and their agents within 21 days. The new California law, which addresses certain escrow procedures, has been mischaracterized by some practitioners as landmark legislation calling for a 21-day turnaround for short sale approvals.
    The new law inserts a short payoff amount request into the existing payoff demand law which generally requires a lender to respond to a request for a payoff demand statement within 21 days from when it is requested, typically by escrow. The new law essentially requires, after a short sale has already been approved, for the lender to respond to a request for a short-pay demand statement within 21 days. The lender’s response to escrow can be a short-pay demand statement or even, depending on the circumstances, a written statement electing not to proceed with the proposed transaction.
    Another provision of SB 306 may also cause confusion. In practice, a lender may approve a short sale subject to its review of a closing statement prepared by escrow, but the lender does not review that closing statement promptly. Under the new law, if a lender fails to approve the closing statement within four days, the closing statement shall be deemed approved, but only if it is “not clearly contrary to the terms of the short-pay agreement or the short-pay demand statement provided to the escrowholder.” The new law does not bind a lender to a short payoff amount in an offer that the lender has not approved.
    Senate Bill 306 contains other technical changes in real estate related laws, such as, but not limited to, the following:
    Expanding the existing requirement for a lender to contact certain borrowers to explore options for avoiding foreclosure at least 30 days before filing a notice of default, to include not only owner-occupied residences, but also owner-occupied residential property with two-to-four dwelling units.
    Extending the existing requirement for a lender to record a notice of sale from 14 to 20 days before a trustee’s sale. This provision does not change existing law requiring a lender to wait at least 20 days after mailing a notice of sale before conducting a trustee’s sale.
    This new law comes into effect on January 1, 2010. The full text of Senate Bill 306 is available at http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/09-10/bill/sen/sb_0301-0350/sb_306_bill_20090806_chaptered.pdf.

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