Monday August 22, 2011

Pasco Couple Fear Losing Home to Foreclosure for Paying Mortgage Too Early

Below is a recent article written by St. Petersburg Times Staff Writer Mark Puente.

NEW PORT RICHEY — Seventy-year-old Sharon Bullington may lose her home because she paid her mortgage a week early.

That may not make much sense to the thousands of homeowners who are behind on their mortgages in Florida. But it seems it does to Bank of America, which has filed to foreclose on Bullington and her husband, James, 78, who is terminally ill.

"It's like death to me," Sharon Bullington said, her voice quivering on the phone Friday. "My husband is bedridden. It's almost more than I can bear."

The couple moved to Florida 15 years ago after James Bullington retired from General Motors in Flint, Mich., and moved into the 1,591-square-foot New Port Richey home, which is now valued at $133,464, though they owe about $177,000.

When James became ill, the couple encountered financial difficulties because of high medical bills. The couple asked Bank of America to modify the loan.

There was a catch. The couple would have to first officially default on their $1,400-a-month payment. The couple did that and entered into the modification plan, which reduced their payment to $916.

Sharon Bullington made the January payment on Dec. 23, and the bank accepted the money, according to court records.

The next month, she made the February payment over the phone. Weeks later, the money had not been withdrawn from her bank account. After Bullington asked the bank about it, a representative told her she had punched in the wrong routing number. In March, the bank kicked the couple out of the modification plan.

Bullington pleaded for help in a June letter to Bank of America president Brian Moynihan and U.S. Rep. Gus Bilirakis, R-Palm Harbor.

One of Moynihan's aides, Ana Olivera, told Bullington the foreclosure could not be stopped. She wrote in a two-page letter that the payment due on Jan. 1, 2011, had been made in December.

"In accordance with the Trial Payment Letter dated December 15, 2010, it indicates that if you are not able to make each payment in the month in which it is due, you will not be eligible for a modification under the Home Affordable Modification Program," the letter said.

Olivera told Bullington she could avoid a foreclosure by selling the home in a short sale or by signing it over to the bank. The letter said the bank values Bullington's business and strives to provide exceptional customer service.

"I understand that you may be disappointed with our final resolution and appreciate the opportunity to clarify this matter," Olivera wrote. "While this may not be the response you were hoping for, I trust I have addressed your concerns."

Olivera, a California-based employee, declined to comment about the case when reached by the Times on Friday. Bank of America replied in an e-mail: "We are going to re-review the Bullington's case."

The Bullingtons' lawyer, Shawn Yesner, said the case makes no sense because his clients did what the bank told them to do. In 10 years as a lawyer, he said, he has never seen such an outrageous letter.

"I couldn't believe they would put that in writing," he said. "I had to read the letter three or four times. … Bank of America is putting her in a depressed state. She has never been behind on anything."

As thousands of property owners across Florida and the nation battle foreclosure, defense attorneys have accused lenders of bogging down the courts with an unwillingness to negotiate with people on their mortgages, often by simply refusing to make decisions.

Earlier this month, a 41-year-old man faced foreclosure after missing a mortgage payment on a St. Petersburg gas station by just one day. He made several attempts to continue paying and made a $50,000 payment in court earlier this month to settle the case, but the bank refused the payment. The day the Times published an article detailing the saga, BB&T suspended the foreclosure action and worked to settle the case.

Sharon Bullington, who has no children or siblings, said she is the sole caregiver for her ill husband, who cannot move from the home in his condition. She said she has repeatedly contacted the bank, but nobody will talk to her.

She wants Moynihan and Bank of America to know this:

"I want them to feel how we feel," she said. "I just don't understand why they're doing this. It looks like they're out to get us."

Times researcher Shirl Kennedy and staff writer Molly Moorhead contributed to this report. Mark Puente can be reached at mpuente@sptimes.com or (727) 893-8459. Follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/markpuente.

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Thursday August 4, 2011

Fast-Growing Tampa Bay Law Firm Expands Staff and Moves to Larger Offices

ST. PETERSBURG, Florida – One of Florida's premier law firms, which has expanded its general practice but remains focused on real estate, bankruptcies, foreclosures and short sales, has expanded its staff again and moved its headquarters.

Yesner & Boss, P.L. (www.yesnerboss.com) recently left its standalone building for high-rise quarters at 9800 4th Street N, Suite 402, St. Petersburg, FL 33702. The new office is about a dozen blocks southwest of the old one and retains its phone number: 727.471.0039.

"We were out of space and gained about 2,000 square feet in the move," said partner Shawn Yesner. "And the building provides the warm, professional image we try to convey as a full-service firm." The new office is just south of the Gandy Boulevard corridor connecting Pinellas and Hillsborough Counties.

In addition to personal and commercial real estate law, Yesner & Boss handles family law, including divorce, child custody, alimony, and estate planning, tax law, personal injury and plaintiff's litigation. Now with four offices – in St. Petersburg, Tampa, Sarasota and Palm Beach, 10 lawyers and a full-time staff of 23 – the practice required a new management tactic, Yesner said. The firm added CEO Ron Prather, a licensed attorney and real estate veteran.

"As we continued to grow, we realized that to better serve our clients, we needed to put someone in charge of the day-to-day functions of the office so we could devote more time to the practice of law and business development," Yesner said.

Prather, 61, is a native of Texas but has lived in Florida since 2004. He owned development and real estate firms in Illinois and practiced law there. He consulted for real estate firms in Florida before joining Yesner & Boss.

"The first time I sat down and talked to this firm, it seemed like a great fit," Prather said.

Florida is second in the nation only to Nevada in real estate foreclosures with nearly 123,000 new actions this year, according to RealtyTrak, which follows real estate trends nationwide. While the heaviest Florida foreclosure concentrations are in the southeast and east-central areas, the numbers remain high in greater Tampa Bay.

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