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Suggest You - Yield Maintenance Fees, Part I: Indiana Law
Advertising On Talk Radio May Be Better Than Ads On Music Radio tgages. The Indiana Court of Appeals upheld the fee assessment and cited with approval the general rule in LHD. Id. at 888. “When [borrower] sought to prepay, it was attempting to vary the terms of the previously existing agreement. In essence, it was negotiating a new contract which would deprive [lender] of the interest it was to receive as consideration for making the loans [borrower] sought at the time. Clearly, [lender] was entitled to negotiate for and receive a ‘yield maintenance fee’ in lieu of the interest it would lose by prepayment.” Id.Recently, I have noticed some of my radio habits when driving in my car. When I'm listening to music I tend to switch radio stations whenever a commercial comes on. When I’m listening to talk radio I tend to leave the dial as is whether I’m listening to a talk show or whether a commercial is playing.I've been thinking about why this is the case and if other radio listeners have the same tendencies as I do. Here is what I think: When I’m in the mood for music, I want to hear music; I don't want to listen to radio advertisements. When I listen to talk radio, I get immersed in the topic being discussed and my concentration is on that topic. A commercial break does not cause me to change the dial. So I end up hearing the ads.Not only do I hear the ads on talk radio, but I also remember them. A high majority of the ads I hear on 3. Coca Cola Bottling. The last Indiana case on point is Coca Cola Bottling Company v. Citizens Bank, 583 N.E.2d 184 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991). The very complicated dispute surrounded a loan to Coca Cola Bottling of Portland, Indiana that was secured by the bottling plant property. The relevant loan agreement prohibited any prepayment before a certain date. The borrower ultimately stopped its interest payments to the lender in the hope that the lender would accelerate the loan obligation (seemingly as predicted by the lender’s lawyers in LHD). The pertinent issue in Coca Cola Bottling was Want the Truth About Who Loves Money? Read this Review Depending upon the nature of the deal, a commercial lender’s promissory note may contain a yield maintenance provision (the descendant of a prepayment clause). The provisions come in all shapes and sizes, and, to my knowledge, there is no universally-followed form. But they all have one thing in common: in the event the note is paid before maturity, the borrower must pay fees over and above the standard payoff amount of principal and interest. The purpose of such provisions, in theory, is to compensate the lender for the interest it would have received had the borrower made all the payments called for under the note. The question is whether these kinds of contract terms are enforceable in Indiana and, if so, under what circumstances.Who Loves Money is a new E-Book written by Kyle & Carson, also known as The Wealthy Affiliates. Kyle & Carson have been involved in internet marketing for over 8 years and have written some other very successful programs and their products are usually a step ahead of the competition and Who Loves Money in my opinion is one of their best products. Who Loves Money is for the beginner, intermediate, and advanced marketer. What separates Who Loves Money from all the other E-Books out there is that Kyle & Carson let you know up front that this is not get rich quick scheme and you will have to invest time and be willing to learn and implement their strategies that they use every day to earn an income online.I think the main reason a lot of internet marketers fail is because they think they will just pick a product advertise on Google a The case law. Because the Indiana Supreme Court has not ruled on the validity of prepayment premiums or yield maintenance fees, the law in Indiana stems from two Court of Appeals decisions (in 1990 and 1991) and one opinion from the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit (in 1984). 1. LHD. The first case, In the Matter of: LHD Realty Corporation, 726 F.2d 327 (7th Cir. 1984), dealt with a promissory note and a mortgage on an office building and parking garage. The borrower was to repay the note in monthly installments over fifteen years. The note provided that, if the borrower paid the loan before maturity, then the lender received a prepayment premium. The borrower subsequently filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and stopped making payments. The lender sought relief from the bankruptcy stay in order to foreclose its lien. The Court denied the lender relief but instead permitted the borrower to sell the property. One of the issues in the case was whether the lender could receive a prepayment premium in the payoff from the sale. According to the Seventh Circuit, the general rule is that reasonable prepayment premiums are enforceable. “Prepayment premiums serve a valid purpose in compensating at least in part for the anticipated interest a lender will not receive if a loan is paid off prematurely. Among other things, a prepayment premium insures the lender against the loss of his bargain if interest rates decline.” Id. at 330. One exception (there are a few) to the rule is that the lender loses its right to a premium when it elects to accelerate the debt. Here’s the logic – acceleration, by definition, “advances the maturity date of the debt so that payment thereafter is not prepayment but instead a payment made after maturity.” Id. at 331. The Seventh Circuit held that the LHD case fell within the acceleration exception. The lender abandoned (waived) its claim to interest payable over a period of years by requesting relief from the automatic stay in order to proceed with foreclosure. As such, “it is not appropriate, under these circumstances, for the lender to receive a prepayment premium in lieu of the interest foregone since it has voluntarily waived the unpaid interest in the expectation of accelerated payment of the remaining principal.” Id. Interestingly, the lender argued that recognition of the acceleration exception may cause borrowers to default intentionally and “court” acceleration and foreclosure in order to avoid prepayment liability. The Seventh Circuit dismissed this, however, as “implausible given the ramifications of default for a borrower’s credit rating and the ability of the lender to sidestep the ploy by suing only for overdue payments as they mature, together with attorney’s fees.” Id. [I’m not sure I agree with the Court on this point. I’ve seen an intentional default, and in the Coca Cola Bottling case discussed below the borrower ostensibly took this approach.] 2. McCae. The next in the line of three cases, decided in 1990 by the Indiana Court of Appeals, is McCae Management v. Merchants National Bank, 553 N.E.2d 884 (Ind. Ct. App. 1990). The case surrounded a loan for the construction and operation of two nursing homes and involved two promissory notes secured by real estate mortgages. The notes provided that there was no right to prepayment. On the other hand, the notes did not have yield maintenance provisions. Id. at 886. Before maturity, however, the borrower sold the two healthcare facilities and requested payoff amounts from the lender. The lender demanded a “yield maintenance fee,” though that term appeared nowhere in any of the loan documents. The borrower paid a reduced yield maintenance fee under protest and then filed suit, arguing that the yield maintenance fee was not warranted since it was not mentioned in the notes of mortgages. The Indiana Court of Appeals upheld the fee assessment and cited with approval the general rule in LHD. Id. at 888. “When [borrower] sought to prepay, it was attempting to vary the terms of the previously existing agreement. In essence, it was negotiating a new contract which would deprive [lender] of the interest it was to receive as consideration for making the loans [borrower] sought at the time. Clearly, [lender] was entitled to negotiate for and receive a ‘yield maintenance fee’ in lieu of the interest it would lose by prepayment.” Id. 3. Coca Cola Bottling. The last Indiana case on point is Coca Cola Bottling Company v. Citizens Bank, 583 N.E.2d 184 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991). The very complicated dispute surrounded a loan to Coca Cola Bottling of Portland, Indiana that was secured by the bottling plant property. The relevant loan agreement prohibited any prepayment before a certain date. The borrower ultimately stopped its interest payments to the lender in the hope that the lender would accelerate the loan obligation (seemingly as predicted by the lender’s lawyers in LHD). The pertinent issue in Coca Cola Bottling was Computerized Financial Accounting - Methods and Practices - Use of software in Accounting t with a promissory note and a mortgage on an office building and parking garage. The borrower was to repay the note in monthly installments over fifteen years. The note provided that, if the borrower paid the loan before maturity, then the lender received a prepayment premium. The borrower subsequently filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and stopped making payments. The lender sought relief from the bankruptcy stay in order to foreclose its lien. The Court denied the lender relief but instead permitted the borrower to sell the property. One of the issues in the case was whether the lender could receive a prepayment premium in the payoff from the sale.Complete financial accounting course or tutorial covers a range of following topics. It is being evaluated that how computers have affected traditional accounting methods and practices. Financial Accounting with Double Entry Bookkeeping Principles of Accounting Basic Book of Accounting - Journal Accounting Ledger Accounting Sub Journals - Cash Cook Subsidiary Accounting Books Accounting Verification by Trial Balance Banking Transactions Bank Reconciliation Statement Depreciation Rectification Of Accounting Errors Balance Sheet and Profit and Loss Account Single Entry Bookkeeping Accounting System Non Profit Organization Accounting Capital and Revenue Reserves and ProvisionsIn a very short span According to the Seventh Circuit, the general rule is that reasonable prepayment premiums are enforceable. “Prepayment premiums serve a valid purpose in compensating at least in part for the anticipated interest a lender will not receive if a loan is paid off prematurely. Among other things, a prepayment premium insures the lender against the loss of his bargain if interest rates decline.” Id. at 330. One exception (there are a few) to the rule is that the lender loses its right to a premium when it elects to accelerate the debt. Here’s the logic – acceleration, by definition, “advances the maturity date of the debt so that payment thereafter is not prepayment but instead a payment made after maturity.” Id. at 331. The Seventh Circuit held that the LHD case fell within the acceleration exception. The lender abandoned (waived) its claim to interest payable over a period of years by requesting relief from the automatic stay in order to proceed with foreclosure. As such, “it is not appropriate, under these circumstances, for the lender to receive a prepayment premium in lieu of the interest foregone since it has voluntarily waived the unpaid interest in the expectation of accelerated payment of the remaining principal.” Id. Interestingly, the lender argued that recognition of the acceleration exception may cause borrowers to default intentionally and “court” acceleration and foreclosure in order to avoid prepayment liability. The Seventh Circuit dismissed this, however, as “implausible given the ramifications of default for a borrower’s credit rating and the ability of the lender to sidestep the ploy by suing only for overdue payments as they mature, together with attorney’s fees.” Id. [I’m not sure I agree with the Court on this point. I’ve seen an intentional default, and in the Coca Cola Bottling case discussed below the borrower ostensibly took this approach.] 2. McCae. The next in the line of three cases, decided in 1990 by the Indiana Court of Appeals, is McCae Management v. Merchants National Bank, 553 N.E.2d 884 (Ind. Ct. App. 1990). The case surrounded a loan for the construction and operation of two nursing homes and involved two promissory notes secured by real estate mortgages. The notes provided that there was no right to prepayment. On the other hand, the notes did not have yield maintenance provisions. Id. at 886. Before maturity, however, the borrower sold the two healthcare facilities and requested payoff amounts from the lender. The lender demanded a “yield maintenance fee,” though that term appeared nowhere in any of the loan documents. The borrower paid a reduced yield maintenance fee under protest and then filed suit, arguing that the yield maintenance fee was not warranted since it was not mentioned in the notes of mortgages. The Indiana Court of Appeals upheld the fee assessment and cited with approval the general rule in LHD. Id. at 888. “When [borrower] sought to prepay, it was attempting to vary the terms of the previously existing agreement. In essence, it was negotiating a new contract which would deprive [lender] of the interest it was to receive as consideration for making the loans [borrower] sought at the time. Clearly, [lender] was entitled to negotiate for and receive a ‘yield maintenance fee’ in lieu of the interest it would lose by prepayment.” Id. 3. Coca Cola Bottling. The last Indiana case on point is Coca Cola Bottling Company v. Citizens Bank, 583 N.E.2d 184 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991). The very complicated dispute surrounded a loan to Coca Cola Bottling of Portland, Indiana that was secured by the bottling plant property. The relevant loan agreement prohibited any prepayment before a certain date. The borrower ultimately stopped its interest payments to the lender in the hope that the lender would accelerate the loan obligation (seemingly as predicted by the lender’s lawyers in LHD). The pertinent issue in Coca Cola Bottling was Law School Students Often Say They Want to Help People remium when it elects to accelerate the debt. Here’s the logic – acceleration, by definition, “advances the maturity date of the debt so that payment thereafter is not prepayment but instead a payment made after maturity.” Id. at 331. The Seventh Circuit held that the LHD case fell within the acceleration exception. The lender abandoned (waived) its claim to interest payable over a period of years by requesting relief from the automatic stay in order to proceed with foreclosure. As such, “it is not appropriate, under these circumstances, for the lender to receive a prepayment premium in lieu of the interest foregone since it has voluntarily waived the unpaid interest in the expectation of accelerated payment of the remaining principal.” Id.I recently started taking a survey as I travel what is left of our nation from the over letigiousness terrorist attacks from lawyers; I ask students in coffee shops studying law why they want to be a lawyer. They have to reasons; One, to make money and two, to help people. Yes it is true; law School students often say they want to help people.When I discuss this with these young folks they say, I want to help people. If someone slips on a banana peal outside of business and breaks their leg, I can collect for them? What? I say? No matter if the company is a third generation steak house with all you can eat ribs and Porterhouse steaks? No bananas have been sold there in over 45 years? And that the life savings of the couple who owns the establishment has two kids in college and one who needs soccer shoes and all that need health cove Interestingly, the lender argued that recognition of the acceleration exception may cause borrowers to default intentionally and “court” acceleration and foreclosure in order to avoid prepayment liability. The Seventh Circuit dismissed this, however, as “implausible given the ramifications of default for a borrower’s credit rating and the ability of the lender to sidestep the ploy by suing only for overdue payments as they mature, together with attorney’s fees.” Id. [I’m not sure I agree with the Court on this point. I’ve seen an intentional default, and in the Coca Cola Bottling case discussed below the borrower ostensibly took this approach.] 2. McCae. The next in the line of three cases, decided in 1990 by the Indiana Court of Appeals, is McCae Management v. Merchants National Bank, 553 N.E.2d 884 (Ind. Ct. App. 1990). The case surrounded a loan for the construction and operation of two nursing homes and involved two promissory notes secured by real estate mortgages. The notes provided that there was no right to prepayment. On the other hand, the notes did not have yield maintenance provisions. Id. at 886. Before maturity, however, the borrower sold the two healthcare facilities and requested payoff amounts from the lender. The lender demanded a “yield maintenance fee,” though that term appeared nowhere in any of the loan documents. The borrower paid a reduced yield maintenance fee under protest and then filed suit, arguing that the yield maintenance fee was not warranted since it was not mentioned in the notes of mortgages. The Indiana Court of Appeals upheld the fee assessment and cited with approval the general rule in LHD. Id. at 888. “When [borrower] sought to prepay, it was attempting to vary the terms of the previously existing agreement. In essence, it was negotiating a new contract which would deprive [lender] of the interest it was to receive as consideration for making the loans [borrower] sought at the time. Clearly, [lender] was entitled to negotiate for and receive a ‘yield maintenance fee’ in lieu of the interest it would lose by prepayment.” Id. 3. Coca Cola Bottling. The last Indiana case on point is Coca Cola Bottling Company v. Citizens Bank, 583 N.E.2d 184 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991). The very complicated dispute surrounded a loan to Coca Cola Bottling of Portland, Indiana that was secured by the bottling plant property. The relevant loan agreement prohibited any prepayment before a certain date. The borrower ultimately stopped its interest payments to the lender in the hope that the lender would accelerate the loan obligation (seemingly as predicted by the lender’s lawyers in LHD). The pertinent issue in Coca Cola Bottling was Surprised Realtor r overdue payments as they mature, together with attorney’s fees.” Id. [I’m not sure I agree with the Court on this point. I’ve seen an intentional default, and in the Coca Cola Bottling case discussed below the borrower ostensibly took this approach.]As a Realtor you never stop being surprised. Earlier this week, for one of my clients, I made an offer on a wonderful Sacramento area home. We have been looking for the perfect home during past several months. We finally found a house in their price range and met all of their needs. In today’s market where the numbers of sales are down and inventory is still high, I was shocked by how the listing agent chose to deal with our offer.After submitting the offer, I got a call from the listing agent who informed me she was going to get a second offer but if my clients would like to make a full price offer she would accept my word and “take it to the church.” Who knows what the church has to do with it, I thought it went to the bank? We were not going to get into a bidding war with a non-existent second offer so we remained quiet and 2. McCae. The next in the line of three cases, decided in 1990 by the Indiana Court of Appeals, is McCae Management v. Merchants National Bank, 553 N.E.2d 884 (Ind. Ct. App. 1990). The case surrounded a loan for the construction and operation of two nursing homes and involved two promissory notes secured by real estate mortgages. The notes provided that there was no right to prepayment. On the other hand, the notes did not have yield maintenance provisions. Id. at 886. Before maturity, however, the borrower sold the two healthcare facilities and requested payoff amounts from the lender. The lender demanded a “yield maintenance fee,” though that term appeared nowhere in any of the loan documents. The borrower paid a reduced yield maintenance fee under protest and then filed suit, arguing that the yield maintenance fee was not warranted since it was not mentioned in the notes of mortgages. The Indiana Court of Appeals upheld the fee assessment and cited with approval the general rule in LHD. Id. at 888. “When [borrower] sought to prepay, it was attempting to vary the terms of the previously existing agreement. In essence, it was negotiating a new contract which would deprive [lender] of the interest it was to receive as consideration for making the loans [borrower] sought at the time. Clearly, [lender] was entitled to negotiate for and receive a ‘yield maintenance fee’ in lieu of the interest it would lose by prepayment.” Id. 3. Coca Cola Bottling. The last Indiana case on point is Coca Cola Bottling Company v. Citizens Bank, 583 N.E.2d 184 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991). The very complicated dispute surrounded a loan to Coca Cola Bottling of Portland, Indiana that was secured by the bottling plant property. The relevant loan agreement prohibited any prepayment before a certain date. The borrower ultimately stopped its interest payments to the lender in the hope that the lender would accelerate the loan obligation (seemingly as predicted by the lender’s lawyers in LHD). The pertinent issue in Coca Cola Bottling was To Furnish Or Not To Furnish - That Is The Question tgages. The Indiana Court of Appeals upheld the fee assessment and cited with approval the general rule in LHD. Id. at 888. “When [borrower] sought to prepay, it was attempting to vary the terms of the previously existing agreement. In essence, it was negotiating a new contract which would deprive [lender] of the interest it was to receive as consideration for making the loans [borrower] sought at the time. Clearly, [lender] was entitled to negotiate for and receive a ‘yield maintenance fee’ in lieu of the interest it would lose by prepayment.” Id.As a landlord myself, and owner of a lettings agency, I constantly get asked whether to furnish the property or not.There are a few advantages in not installing furniture, price, time and damages are three of them.However, it depends on where your property is,and if there are any damages, then that's what the bond is for !These days, many towns and cities now have a very transient population, which means that people come and go every 6 or 12 months. Often these tenants have a "weekend" family and go to the property during their working week.As more and more tenants become transient, its the unfurnished properties that miss out as the ones with furniture get taken up first.So it makes sense for many reasons to furnish your property, but the main three are :Tax Break - you can claim 10% depreciation 3. Coca Cola Bottling. The last Indiana case on point is Coca Cola Bottling Company v. Citizens Bank, 583 N.E.2d 184 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991). The very complicated dispute surrounded a loan to Coca Cola Bottling of Portland, Indiana that was secured by the bottling plant property. The relevant loan agreement prohibited any prepayment before a certain date. The borrower ultimately stopped its interest payments to the lender in the hope that the lender would accelerate the loan obligation (seemingly as predicted by the lender’s lawyers in LHD). The pertinent issue in Coca Cola Bottling was whether acceleration was an exclusive remedy. Without actually using the words “prepayment premium” or “yield maintenance fees,” the lender argued it was entitled to interest as agreed for the full term of the loan documents, even if the lender accelerated, on the theory that the lender should receive the benefit of its bargain. The Court concluded, however, that once the lender chose to accelerate the maturity date and render the borrower’s debt immediately due and payable, the lender could not pursue any other remedy because other remedies were not available. “Acceleration, when acted upon, by maturing the debt, precludes any other remedy; the parties are receiving the benefit of the bargain as contemplated by the specific terms of their agreement by acceleration.” Id. at 190. In other words, as a general proposition, lenders can’t recover both default and yield maintenance remedies. Look for Part II on this subject next week in my blog’s Practical Pointers category.
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