I've been made aware an attorney has been foreclosing but on behalf of an entity [Condominium Association] that never gave him permission.

    How is this legal?

    I know someone in Chapter 13 and the attorney keeps threatening to try to lift the stay. But, I have court filings on another case where he states he only files LARA to keep the entity foreclosing it alive, then he tales roughly 40% of the foreclosure for himself and then gives the test to an "agent."

    So, it's [entity with legal authority that should probably be dissolved] by way of [agent] forecloses.

    Legal in Michigan? Foreclosure without legal authority.
    byu/RaskyBukowski inRealEstate



    Posted by RaskyBukowski

    2 Comments

    1. Tall_poppee on

      That’s an awful specific legal question, with pretty fuzzy details, to expect reddit to be able to answer.

      What kind of entity is he foreclosing on behalf of? Maybe answer that for starters.

    2. PokerLawyer75 on

      So I hvae no idea what you mean by “LARA”. But I used to be a foreclosure attorney and now represent people being foreclosed upon.

      You don’t know if the entity “gave him permission.” There’s no way you can know, as you are not privy to their relationship and any contract between the parties. As for what he’s keeping, that’s his fee. Which mean he’s most likely filing on contingency.

      And if the entity owns the paper, then there’s no cause for dissolution.

      I’m not sure why you feel like you have any claims on this.

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