Friday, November 11, 2011

Foreclosures in Hawaii Down 66% Compared to a Year Ago Under New State Law

Foreclosures down 66% under new state law
By Andrew Gomes
Article from: Star-Advertiser
A 6-month-old Hawaii law continued to constrain the flow of foreclosures statewide in October, as a relative 
trickle of cases were initiated mainly through Circuit Court instead of a nonjudicial process through which 
most cases had been pouring prior to the law’s enactment.
Real estate research firm RealtyTrac counted 427 Hawaii foreclosure filings last month, which was 66 percent 
fewer than 1,271 filings in October 2010.
Last month’s count was the highest since the new law took effect May 5, but not by much. There were 414 
cases in September, 413 in August, 390 in July and 344 in June.
The law initially prohibited lenders from proceeding with nonjudicial foreclosure against owner-occupants 
until a mediation program was available to borrowers. That program launched Oct. 3, but lenders as of 
Wednesday had yet to use the new nonjudicial process administered by the state Department of Commerce 
and Consumer Affairs.
The new nonjudicial procedure forces lenders to participate in a mediation program with qualified borrowers 
if borrowers so choose. Qualified borrowers are mainly homeowners who have resided in their homes for a 
minimum 200 days. Excluded from mediation are foreclosures brought by homeowner associations or 
brought against investors.
Local attorneys representing lenders say the law is flawed and that the new nonjudicial process won’t be 
used because it provides for punitive penalties for even the most minor infractions.
The result has been more lenders — but not an overwhelming number — pursuing foreclosures in state 
court.
According to the state Judiciary, 338 new foreclosure cases were filed in court last month, about triple the 
108 cases filed a year earlier. Judicial cases have roughly been between 200 and 300 per month since June, 
up from closer to 100 in the same months last year.
Historically, nonjudicial foreclosures represented an estimated 90 percent of foreclosures in Hawaii because 
they were faster and cheaper.
The Judiciary counts new cases filed. RealtyTrac counts new case filings as well as auction notices and lender 
repossessions. But because RealtyTrac collects its data from a variety of sources, it appears to undercount 
new judicial cases.
Under RealtyTrac’s methodology, 31 other states had higher, or worse, foreclosure rates than Hawaii, which 
had 1 filing for every 1,208 homes.
The national rate was one filing for every 563 homes. Nevada had the worst rate at 1 foreclosure filing per 
180 homes. Vermont had the best rate based on 1 filing per 12,570 homes.
The year-over-year decline in foreclosure filings for Hawaii has conformed with a trend nationally that has 
existed for about a year after major national lenders were forced to review and revise the way they were 
processing cases and handling documents. James Saccacio, RealtyTrac’s chief executive officer, added that 
state law changes and court rulings also have upset the pace of foreclosures.
In Hawaii, there is a push for the Legislature to amend the law next year to make it more palatable to lenders 
while still protecting homeowners. A task force representing the mortgage industry and consumers is 
expected to release recommendations to the Legislature on ways to improve the foreclosure law by the 
end of the year.

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