Forum Discussion
AprilWhine
Jan 08, 2014Explorer
bigdogger wrote:AprilWhine wrote:Actually, I was thinking the opposite. He had the ability to finance what must be a relatively expensive RV, if he is $12K upside down. Contrary to popular belief, most banks are not staffed by complete idiots. They would have had some basis to extend the loan. Often times these questions come because the heirs are trying to preserve as much of the estate as possible.bigdogger wrote:
The ramifications are going to be to him and to his estate, assuming his wife is not living. If he has no estate, having a voluntary repossession (what would happen should you decide to turn it over to the bank) will result in a judgment that will be dismissed by his death. If he has an estate, use some of the assets from that estate to pay the deficiency balance once you sell the rig. Any hit to his credit rating will be moot, since once he moves into a care facility, he will have no need for credit.
This is very good advice. I assume since he has been a full timer for 16 years the house and any cash is long gone.
The test I always use is what decision would you make if the lender was not the bank, but instead a very good friend. It is one thing to tell that friend, "We are so sorry, but dad can no longer pay the loan, he has to have 24 hour care and the cost of that care leaves no money to pay you back." It is another thing to tell them, "hey, dad can't use the RV anymore, so tough luck, we aren't going to cash in any of his assets to pay you, we want the money when he dies. Too bad you made a bad decision on dad's health when you loan him the money."
Looks like the OP has confirmed my assumption. Upside down by $10k could be what's left when buying a new expensive motorhome and financing it for 20 years. ;) Not saying the OP's father did this, but the hubby moonlighted at an RV repair place while he was active duty military. He said it was nothing unusual to see people come in with broken RVs who had sold their house and used the money to make a down payment on an RV. Then they came into the shop, 10-20 years later, with an RV that needed major repairs and no money to repair it. A lot were even still making payments.
Sgeorge, I'm very sorry your father has come to the end of his Rving. But he and his family have at least 16 years of fond memories.
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