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R and R Finance 8
Elizabeth Way Cambridge R and R Mortgage Services Ltd 3
Brittens Lane Salford Milton Keynes R and S (Mortgages) Ltd
Chepstow Rd Langstone Newport R and S Mortgage
Administration Services Ltd 3 Change Clo Bacup R A Reilly
Associates PO Box 7777 Derby R B A Independent Mortgage
Services Ltd Charles Ho 23 High St Uttoxeter R B Mortgage
Brokers 477-479 Romford Rd London R D Fisher Leabank 5
McBey Way Foveran Ellon R D Woodson and Co 10 Chessington
Clo Appleton Warrington R F Mortgages 21 Meadow Way
Bracknell R G B Services 6 Kelland Clo Paignton R G
International 18 Kingsley Ct 142 Kings Rd Brighton R H
Investment Services 6 Pochard Cr Herne Bay R I M Ltd 25
Banbury Rd Kidlington R J C Associates 6 Hermosa Rd
Teignmouth R J Costain PO Box 6204 Bishop's Stortford R
K M G Marlborough House 159 High St Wealdstone Harrow R Lee
Thorn Ho Church St Fen Drayton Cambridge R M Askew
Financial Services 202 New Hall La Preston R M Edwards
Insurance and Mortgage Services Ltd Llandanwg Harlech R M
Mortgage Services 617A Leeds Rd Bradford R P G 65 Redchurch
St London R Protection Ltd 28 Bernard St Southampton R S
B Mortgages 10 Christchurch Cl London R S S Finances 3
Temple Row West Birmingham R W S Financial Consultant 25
Crossgate Cupar R W Shipman Hall La Houghton le
Spring Rabrose Mortgage Services 493B Wimborne Rd
Bournemouth Rachel Campbell Associates Ltd Latimer House
5-7 Cumberland Pl Southampton Radcliffe Protection Ltd
28-30 Bernard St Southampton Raft Independent Mortgage
Services 21 Frogmore Fareham Rainbow Insurance Group 16
South Queen St Morley Leeds Rand 92 High St
Carshalton Rapid Financial Services 69 Station La
Featherstone Pontefract Rapid Mortgage Services 18
Glebelands Merriott Rapid Mortgage Services Ltd 18
Glebelands Merriott Rayan Financial Services 566 London Rd
Isleworth Reach 4 Solutions 116 Harrogate Rd Leeds Real
Choice Mortgage Services Lower Rd Belvedere Real Mortgage
Beauford House Serpentine Rd Cleckheaton Really Flexible
Mortgages Mere Farm Business Complex Redhouse La Hannington
Northampton Reba Mortgage Shop Myler Ct 156-158 Marsh Rd
Luton Red Brick (Mortgages) Ltd Finance House Lower Bridge
St Goole Red Brick Mortgages 24 Boothferry Rd Goole Red
Brick Mortgages 24 Boothferry Rd Goole Red Hot Mortgage
Pyle'inn Mill La Horsford Norwich Red Mortgage Solutions
Grayson Building Shepcote La Sheffield Redwoods 10 New St
Basingstoke Regal Manhatton Ltd Wessex House Upper Market
St Eastleigh Regal Right To Buy 1404 Pershore Rd Stirchley
Birmingham Regency 14 Overhill Rd Stratton
Cirencester Regency 10-15 Lansdowne Rd
Bournemouth Regency Mortagage Corporation First Floor 10-12
Lansdowne Rd Bournemouth Regency Mortgage Corporation PLC
10-12 Lansdowne Rd Bournemouth Regency Mortgage Services Ltd Cross
Street Court 11-13 Cross St Peterborough Regency Mortgages
(UK) Ltd Regency House Toward Rd Sunderland Regency
Partnership 47 Wallingford Rd Goring Reading Regency
Partnership 143 Crockhamwell Rd Woodley Reading Regency
Partnership Mortgages Park House 17 Headley Rd Woodley
Reading Regent 291 Kirkdale London Regent Mortgage and
Financial Management Regent House 291 Kirkdale
London Regents Park Associates 32 Regents Pk Cl West
Bridgford Nottingham Reliance Consultants Ltd 345
Southborough Lane Bromley Remax 22-24 John Finnie St
Kilmarnock Remortgage Mortgages Thrales End La
Harpenden Remortgage Mortgages Northumbria Court Sheen Rd
Richmond Renaissance Endowment Review Services Elm Tree
Southend Ogbourne St. George Marlborough Renaissance
Mortgages Elm Tree Cottage Southend Ogbourne St. George
Marlborough Renley Barnett and Co 48B The Broadway Darkes
La Potters Bar Res-Com Finance Berrington Lodge 93
Tettenhall Rd Wolverhampton Residential and Commercial
Mortgages Ltd 647 Romford Rd London Residential 1 Sun
Alliance House 29 London Rd Bromley Residential Funding
Services 816 Carmarthen Rd Fforestfach Swansea Response
Mortgage Services Ltd 13 Market Hill Diss Results Financial
Ltd 11 Mayfields Shefford Retford Housing 20 Southmere Rd
Bradford Richard Atkinsson Sawdon Hollins Croft The Hollins
Todmorden Richard Hamilton 70 Lucknow Av
Nottingham Richmond Charlton St Oakengates
Telford Richmond Financial Services 12 Cardwell Clo Warton
Preston Richmond House Mortgages and Loans 8 Eaton Ford
Green Eaton Ford St. Neots Richmond Kerr Associates Three
Crowns Yard High St Market Harborough Right Answer Finance
Mount House Bond Av Bletchley Milton Keynes Right Choice 9
Higham Av Warrington Right Choice (Mortgage Solutions) Ltd
5 St. Andrews Rd Gosport Right Mortgage 4 U Hazlemere 70
Chorley New Rd Bolton Right Mortgage 4 U 24 Market Pl
Camelford Right Mortgage For You 20 Molesworth St
Wadebridge Right Mortgage Solution PO Box 10823 Sutton
Coldfield Right Mortgages 51 Hardy St
Maidstone Right-Advice Mortgage Consultancy Ltd 4 Mentmore
Ct Great Holm Milton Keynes Rightmove Mortgages 18 Smokies
Way Biddulph Stoke-on-Trent Right-Way Mortgages and
Financial Services 224 Market St Hyde Riverbank 37a Reading
Rd Pangbourne Reading Riverbank Financial Services Atlantis
House 122 Castle St Reading Riversdale Mortgage Services
Ltd 12-30 Parliament St Liverpool Riverside Apartment 4 136
Duke St Liverpool Riverwood Consultants PO Box 208
Folkestone Rivington Mortgages Ltd 166 Chorley New Rd
Horwich Bolton RJD Finance 112 Leicester La Leamington
Spa Roach and Konetske 111-113 County Rd Walton
Liverpool Robards 303 Oxford Rd Reading Robert and Craig
(IFA) Ltd 117 Comiston Rd Edinburgh Robert Bull 87 Waller
Av Luton Robert Clarke Edgar House Wyndham Pk East Runton
Cromer Robert Nicholas Partnership Blount House Hall Ct
Hall Pk Way Town Centre Telford Robert Price 23 Claremont
Rd Morecambe Robert Sterling Ltd Nicon House 43 Silver St
Enfield Robertson and Co PO Box 105 Hoylake Wirral Robin
Heywood 10 Chadbury Cl Lostock Bolton Robinson Kelly and
Jackson Mortgage Consultancy 226 Bexley Road Northumberland
Heath Erith Robinson Liddell and Jackson 1a Wellington Pde
Blackfen Rd Sidcup Robinson Liddell and Jackson Court Yard
London Robinson Mathias and Jackson 87 Rushey Green
London Roger J Tovell 140 Birches Rd Codsall
Wolverhampton Roland Millward West Hill House West End
Frome Ronald Frame 53 Laburnum Av Port Seton
Prestonpans Rookery 138 Botley Rd Swanwick
Southampton Ros James and Co The Old Stables West Pitten
Plympton Plymouth Ross Brown 37 Haddon Way Carlyon Bay St.
Austell Ross-Shire Mortgage Shop 21 Stafford St
Tain Rothco (Independent Mortgages) Ltd 2M High Force Rd
Riverside Pk Ind Est Middlesbrough Rothco Independent
Mortgages 11A Laburnum Ter Ashington Rothco Independent
Mortgages Ltd Wagonway Rd Alnwick Rothco Independent
Mortgages Ltd 17 Bondgate Without Alnwick Round Oak
Mortgage and Remortgage Services 13 Round Oak Gr
Cheddar Route Group Barber Surgeons Hall 1A Monkwell Sq
London Rowanbank Ltd 6 Summer Pl Edinburgh Roy New 4
Casslee Rd London Roy Worthington Independant mortgage
Solutions Ltd 25 Barkfield La Liverpool Royall Mortgage
Services 360 Gloucester Rd Horfield Bristol Rozanne Duncan
112 Victoria Av Margate Rugby Financial Services Church
Hill Ho High St Yelvertoft Northampton Rural and Business
Specialists Ltd P O Box 281 Meopham Gravesend Rush and Wynn
206 Grand Dr London Russell and Co 15a Leacroft Rd
Iver Russell Mercer Insurance Services Ltd Suite 4 Central
House Central Park Aycliffe Ind Pk Newton Aycliffe Russett
Cedar House Cedar La Frimley Camberley Rydal Finance and
Insurance 116 Whalley New Rd Blackburn
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Mortgage
advice and mortgage calculator .
What is a mortgage ?
A mortgage is a method of using property (real or personal) as security for the payment of a debt.
The term mortgage (from Law French, lit. dead pledge) refers to the legal device used for this purpose, but it is also commonly used to refer to the debt secured by the mortgage, the mortgage loan.
In most jurisdictions mortgages are strongly associated with loans secured on real estate rather than other property (such as ships) and in some cases only land may be mortgaged. Arranging a mortgage is seen as the standard method by which individuals and businesses can purchase residential and commercial real estate without the need to pay the full value immediately. See mortgage loan for residential mortgage lending, and commercial mortgage for lending against commercial property.
In many countries it is normal for home purchases to be funded by a mortgage. In countries where the demand for home ownership is highest, strong domestic markets have developed, notably in Spain, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Participants and variant terminology
Legal systems tend to share certain concepts but vary in the terminology and jargon used.
In general terms the main participants in a mortgage are:
Creditor
The creditor has legal rights to the debt or other obligation secured by the mortgage. That debt is often the obligation to repay the loan by the creditor (or its predecessor lender) who provided the purchase money to acquire the property mortgaged. Typically, creditors are banks, insurers or other financial institutions who make loans available for the purpose of real estate purchase.
A creditor is sometimes referred to as the mortgagee or lender.
Debtor
The debtor is the person or entity who owes the obligation secured by the mortgage, and may be multiple parties. Generally, the debtor must meet the conditions of the underlying loan or other obligation and the conditions of the mortgage. Otherwise, the debtor usually runs the risk of foreclosure of the mortgage by the creditor to recover the debt. Typically the debtors will be the individual home-owners, landlords or businesses who are purchasing their property by way of a loan.
A debtor is sometimes referred to as the mortgagor, borrower, or obligor.
Other participants
Due to the complicated legal exchange, or conveyance, of the property, one or both of the main participants are likely to require legal representation. The terminology varies with legal jurisdiction; see lawyer, solicitor and conveyancer.
Because of the complex nature of many markets the debtor may approach a mortgage broker or financial adviser to help them source an appropriate creditor typically by finding the most competitive loan. Recently, many US consumers (particularly higher income borrowers) are choosing to work with Certified Mortgage Planners, industry experts that work closely with Certified Financial Planners to align the home finance position(s) of homeowners with their larger financial portfolio(s).
The debt is sometimes referred to as the hypothecation, which may make use of the services of a hypothecary to assist in the hypothecation.
In addition to borrowers, lenders, government sponsored agencies, private agencies; there is also a fifth class of participants who are the source of funds - the Life Insurers, Pension Funds, etc.
Other Terminologies
Like any other legal system, the mortgage business sometimes uses confusing jargon. Below are some terms explained in brief. If a term is not explained here it may be related to the mortgage loans rather than to the legal process.
Conveyance
The legal document that transfers ownership of unregistered land.
Disbursements
All the fees of the solicitors and governments, such as stamp duty, land registry, search fees, etc.
Freehold
The ownership of a property and the land.
Land Registration
A legal document that records the ownership of a property and land. This is also known as a Title.
Leasehold
The ownership of the property and land for a specified period, which may be sold separately from freehold, which may be owned by another person.
Legal Charge
A legal document that records the data of the rightful owner of a property or land.
Mortgage Deed
A legal document that stated that the lender has a legal charge over the property.
Sealing Fee
A fee made when the lender releases the legal charge over the property.
Seasoned mortgage
A mortgage which has been paid in a timely manner by the mortgagor for a period of typically no less than six months, and often for more than one year. The term is associated with the secondary market, where mortgages with similar characteristics are bought and sold in bulk.
Legal Aspects
There are essentially two types of legal mortgage.
Mortgage by demise
In a mortgage by demise, the creditor becomes the owner of the mortgaged property until the loan is repaid in full (known as "redemption"). This kind of mortgage takes the form of a conveyance of the property to the creditor, with a condition that the property will be returned on redemption.
This is an older form of legal mortgage and is less common than a mortgage by legal charge. It is no longer available in the UK, by virtue of the Land Registration Act 2002.
Mortgage by legal charge
In a mortgage by legal charge, the debtor remains the legal owner of the property, but the creditor gains sufficient rights over it to enable them to enforce their security, such as a right to take possession of the property or sell it.
To protect the lender, a mortgage by legal charge is usually recorded in a public register. Since mortgage debt is often the largest debt owed by the debtor, banks and other mortgage lenders run title searches of the real property to make certain that there are no mortgages already registered on the debtor's property which might have higher priority. Tax liens, in some cases, will come ahead of mortgages. For this reason, if a borrower has delinquent property taxes, the bank will often pay them to prevent the lienholder from foreclosing and wiping out the mortgage.
This type of mortgage is common in the United States and, since 1925, it has been the usual form of mortgage in England and Wales (it is now the only form - see above).
In Scotland, the mortgage by legal charge is also known as standard security.
See also: Security interests - types of security
History
At common law, a mortgage was a conveyance of land that on its face was absolute and conveyed a fee simple estate, but which was in fact conditional, and would be of no effect if certain conditions were not met --- usually, but not necessarily, the repayment of a debt to the original landowner. Hence the word "mortgage," Law French for "dead pledge;" that is, it was absolute in form, and unlike a "live gage", was not conditionally dependent on its repayment solely from raising and selling crops or livestock, or of simply giving the fruits of crops and livestock coming from the land that was mortgaged. The mortgage debt remained in effect whether or not the land could successfully produce enough income to repay the debt. In theory, a mortgage required no further steps to be taken by the creditor, such as acceptance of crops and livestock, for repayment.
The difficulty with this arrangement was that the lender was absolute owner of the property and could sell it, or refuse to reconvey it to the borrower, who was in a weak position. Increasingly the courts of equity began to protect the borrower's interests, so that a borrower came to have an absolute right to insist on reconveyance on redemption. This right of the borrower is known as the "equity of redemption".
This arrangement, whereby the mortgagee (the lender) was on theory the absolute owner, but in practice had few of the practical rights of ownership, was seen in many jurisdictions as being awkwardly artificial. By statute the common law position was altered so that the mortgagor would retain ownership, but the mortgagee's rights, such as foreclosure, the power of sale and the right to take possession would be protected.
In the United States, those states that have reformed the nature of mortgages in this way are known as lien states. A similar effect was achieved in England and Wales by the Law of Property Act 1925, which abolished mortgages by the conveyance of a fee simple.
Foreclosure and non-recourse lending
In most jurisdictions, a lender may foreclose the mortgaged property if certain conditions - principally, non-payment of the mortgage loan - apply. Subject to local legal requirements, the property may then be sold. Any amounts received from the sale (net of costs) are applied to the original debt. In some jurisdictions, mortgage loans are non-recourse loans: if the funds recouped from sale of the mortgaged property are insufficient to cover the outstanding debt, the lender may not have recourse to the borrower after foreclosure. In other jurisdictions, the borrower remains responsible for any remaining debt. In virtually all jurisdictions, specific procedures for foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged property apply, and may be tightly regulated by the relevant government; in some jurisdictions, foreclosure and sale can occur quite rapidly, while in others, foreclosure may take many months or even years. In many countries, the ability of lenders to foreclose is extremely limited, and mortgage market development has been notably slower.
Mortgages in the United States
Types of Mortgage Instruments
Two types of mortgage instruments are used in the United States: the mortgage (sometimes called a mortgage deed) and the deed of trust.
The mortgage
In all but a few states, a mortgage creates a lien on the title to the mortgaged property. Foreclosure of that lien almost always requires a judicial proceeding declaring the debt to be due and in default and ordering a sale of the property to pay the debt.
The deed of trust
The deed of trust is a deed by the borrower to a trustee for the purposes of securing a debt. In most states, it also merely creates a lien on the title and not a title transfer, regardless of its terms. It differs from a mortgage in that, in many states, it can be foreclosed by a non-judicial sale held by the trustee. It is also possible to foreclose them through a judicial proceeding.
Most "mortgages" in California are actually deeds of trust. The effective difference is that the foreclosure process can be much faster for a deed of trust than for a mortgage, on the order of 3 months rather than a year. Because the foreclosure does not require actions by the court the transaction costs can be quite a bit less.
Deeds of trust to secure repayments of debts should not be confused with trust instruments that are sometimes called deeds of trust but that are used to create trusts for other purposes, such as estate planning. Though there are superficial similarities in the form, many states hold deeds of trust to secure repayment of debts do not create true trust arrangements.
Mortgage lien priority
Except in those few states in the United States that adhere to the title theory of mortgages,[1] either a mortgage or a deed of trust will create a mortgage lien upon the title to the real property being mortgaged. The lien is said to "attach" to the title when the mortgage is signed by the mortgagor and delivered to the mortgagee and the mortgagor receives the funds whose repayment the mortgage secures. Subject to the requirements of the recording laws of the state in which the land is located, this attachment establishes the priority of the mortgage lien with respect to other liens on the property's title.[2] Liens that have attached to the title before the mortgage lien are said to be senior to, or prior to, the mortgage lien. Those attaching afterward are said to be junior or subordinate.[3] The purpose of this priority is to establish the order in which lien holders are entitled to foreclose their liens in an attempt to recover their debts. If there are multiple mortgage liens on the title to a property and the loan secured by a first mortgage is paid off, the second mortgage lien will move up in priority and become the new first mortgage lien on the title. Documenting this new priority arrangement will require the release of the mortgage securing the paid off loan.
Article sourced from wikipedia
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