Loan purchase limits for 2008 are unchanged from those in effect for 2007. Loan purchase limits set the maximum original loan amounts allowed on single-family conventional mortgages.
The loan limits for first mortgages are:
The loan limit for subordinate lien mortgage loans remains at half of the 1-unit loan limit for first mortgages, or $208,500.
A nationwide settlement has been reached in a class action
lawsuit about whether Carrier Corporation (“Carrier”) failed to
disclose alleged defects in the secondary heat exchangers of its
high efficiency gas furnaces. The settlement provides benefits
to those who own or owned a high efficiency gas furnace.
If you’re included, you may send in a claim form to request
a payment, or you can exclude yourself from the settlement, or
object to it. The U.S. District Court for the Western District of
Washington authorized this notice, and will have a hearing to
decide whether to approve the settlement, so that benefits can
be issued. Get a detailed notice at www.FurnaceClaims.com.
W
The Class includes anyone who currently owns a Carrier
90+% high efficiency condensing gas furnace made and sold
since January 1, 1989, and former owners of these furnaces who
had a secondary heat exchanger failure. These furnaces were
sold under the brand names “Carrier,” “Bryant,” “Payne,” and
“Day & Night.” A list of the included models is available by
calling 1-866-517-2490 or going to www.FurnaceClaims.com.
Carrier will pay eligible Class members who had a secondary
heat exchanger failure up to $270 and offer an enhanced
20-year warranty on secondary heat exchangers in
their high-efficiency gas furnaces. Carrier will also provide a
technical bulletin to furnace dealers to help identify furnaces
eligible for coverage under the enhanced warranty. The settlement
doesn’t mean that any law was broken, and Carrier denies
it did anything wrong. Other benefits and more details
about the settlement can be found in a Settlement Agreement
which is available at www.FurnaceClaims.com.
H
You do not have to do anything to receive the
enhanced warranty. However, to request a payment for a
past secondary heat exchanger failure you must complete
and submit a claim form. You can submit a claim form at
www.FurnaceClaims.com. The claim form describes what
you must provide to prove your claim and receive a payment.
Please read the instructions carefully, fill out the claim
form, and submit it online or mail it postmarked no later than
August 1, 2008
If you don’t want to be legally bound by the settlement,
you must exclude yourself by
be able to start a lawsuit against Carrier on your own about
the legal claims in this case. This case does not affect personal
injury, wrongful death, or emotional distress claims. If
you exclude yourself, you can’t get any benefits from the
settlement, but you will keep your original warranty rights. If
you stay in the settlement, you may object to it by
2008
or object.
The Court will hold a hearing in this case, known as
Harbor Adventist Christian School v. Carrier Corporation
No. CV05-5437, on
approve the settlement, and a request by Class Counsel for
fees, costs, and expenses of up to $9,950,000. Class Counsel
will also ask for a payment of $3,500 to each Class Representative,
who helped the lawyers on behalf of the whole Class.
You or your own lawyer may ask to appear and speak at the
hearing at your own cost, but you don’t have to. For more
information, go to the website shown below.
If you own or owned a high efficiency
gas furnace, you could get benefits
from a class action settlement.
Includes Carrier, Bryant, Payne, and Day & Night
furnaces made and sold since January 1, 1989.
LEGAL NOTICE
www.FurnaceClaims.com 1-866-517-2490
Para una notificación en Español, llamar o visitar nuestro website.
Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007
On Thursday, December 20th, President Bush signed into law a bill passed by Congress: H.R. 3648 – Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007. Prior to this action, forgiven mortgage debt due to foreclosure, short sale, or deed of lieu of foreclosure, was considered taxable income. The new law, however, temporarily waives these taxes for debts forgiven from the beginning of 2007 to the end of 2009.
The Three Major Points are:
1. Elimination of the “phantom tax” on foreclosures, short sales or other discharges of debt on a primary residence. Consider this scenario: A property is worth $250,000, and the mortgage balance is $300,000. Under the old rules, if a lender forgave the $50k difference as part of a foreclosure, short sale, refinance or loan modification, the borrower was issued a 1099 and had to claim the $50k as income and pay federal income taxes on that amount. The new law eliminates this “phantom tax”, and the forgiven debt is no longer treated as taxable income to the borrower. There are, of course, limits and restrictions. For example, the maximum amount of “forgiven debt” is $2,000,000 for a married couple filing jointly and $1,000,000 for a single person. Because the bill only applies to a “principal residence,” investment properties and second homes are not eligible.
2. The tax deduction for mortgage insurance premiums is now extended until December 31, 2010, instead of expiring at the end of 2007.
3. The capital gains exclusion is now $500,000 instead of $250,000 for an unmarried individual who sells their primary residence within 2 years of the time their spouse has died. This new guideline applies to sales after December 31, 2007, and provides relief for widows and widowers by giving them a 2 year window from the time their spouse has died to sell their home and receive the $500,000 exclusion. Of course, the same rules apply as before, where the individual(s) need to have lived in the home as their primary residence for 2 out of the last 5 years.
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