Legal Question in Real Estate Law in Nevada
Short Sales
Hi,
I have a property in Nevada and I just received an approval letter from Countrywide on a short sale. However, the letter states that they will reserve the right to pursue me for the deficiency. Apparently, this is something Cwide starting doing a couple months ago to protect MI companies and investors. I believe Nevada is a non-judicial state. If I let them foreclose, they can't pursue me for the deficiency. But, if I agree to the short sale, does that mean now they CAN pursue me? Thanks for your help!
2 Answers from Attorneys
Re: Short Sales
You are correct that Nevada is a non-judicial "trust deed" state. If Countrywide does foreclose they DO have 6 months from the date of the trustee's sale to file an action to collect any deficiency - the difference between the sales price and the total owed them on the date of the sale.
You might want to make a counter offer asking that they accept the short sale and forgive the deficiency through their approval letter.
Spencer Judd, Esq.
Re: Short Sales
I believe they can pursue you for a deficiency judgment. It sounds like their approval of a short sale only lets the buyer get good title. It doesn't really do anything for you.