Legal Question in Real Estate Law in Illinois
Mortgage medical condition
If you are diagnosed as clincially depressed, not thinking clearly, and you sign mortgage papers, is there a way to make the contract null and void? I bought a condo that way more money than I could afford, and due to depression was not thinking clearly at the time. Is there something I can do to get out of it outside of just letting them foreclose?
2 Answers from Attorneys
Re: Mortgage medical condition
In my opinion, you have an out. For a contract
to be binding there must be a "meeting of the
minds." If you can prove that your depression
prevented you from understanding the terms of the
contract, or from being able to rationally
understand the extent of the financial obligation
you were assuming, arguably you should be able
to get out of the contract. Of course, it will
be necessary to litigate the issue, but in my
opinion there is a chance. Currently, I have
a client who is a mortgage broker and a lady
with whom he obtained the mortgage has named him
as a third party defendant in a case in which
she is being sued in a foreclosure action. She is claiming that her mental state did not allow her to understand the specifics of the mortgage that my client obtained for her. In Illinois
the Office of the Attorney General is investigating transactions in which people like
yourself have been taken advantage of. I will
be happy to answer any additional questions that
you might have.
Re: Mortgage medical condition
Your options are limited. Clearly, the mortgage lender thought you had the ability to pay the mortgage based on your application. So, this argument, based on a practical application of logic, will fail. If your situation has changed materially since the closing (remember you signed standard documents at the closing that basically said that your situation did not change)then you might seriously consider filing a chapter 13 bankruptcy petition. Since you will be a debtor in possession, you could then either list the property for sale after getting permission from the court, or give it to the Trustee. Just some thoughts; good luck!