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Conveyance By A "Title Holding" Land Trust
How to Safely Assume Non-Assumable Loans Without Down Payment or Credit
qualifying and without Subterfuge or Due-On-Sale Clause Compromise.
Remember that TV ad of a few years
back? The one where a guy eating a chocolate bar rounds a blind corner and
smacks into a lady munching a peanut butter sandwich… and Voilá, the Reese’s
Peanut Butter Cup is born? Well, something similar just happened within the
world of creative real estate financing. Grossly underrated, and too frequently
misunderstood, the Title-holding Land Trust has collided with the “Net
Residential Lease,” with astounding results.
Land Trusts have been around for
centuries, but only a select few folks know beans about trusts in general; much
less what a land trust is. Talk to 200 attorneys and you might find one with a
clue as to what happens when an Assignment of Beneficiary Interest in a
title-holding trust is integrated with a Net Lease (i.e., a Lease wherein the
lessee covers all contractual costs of possession).
Despite an almost universal
ignorance of land trusts among lawyers, the fact is that anyone residing in, and
making payments on, a property held in a title-holding (Illinois-type) land
trust, need do little more than acquire a co-beneficiary interest in the same
trust, to enjoy all the benefits of homeownership. Pride of Ownership, Use,
Occupancy, Equity Build-Up, Appreciation and Income Tax benefits are immediately
available to properly documented co-beneficiaries in land trusts [e.g., see IRC
163(h)4(D); Rev. Rul. 92-0105, Belden, 70 TCM 274, Dec. 50,802(M) re. IRC Reg.
§1.163-1(b) etc.].
At last, a legal
Shield for the fun stuff…
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Passive Seller-Carry’s without risk of attachment to the property by the
other party’s creditors, tax liens, bankruptcies or marital dispute actions.
In other words… the objectives and benefits of Lease Options, Wraps, Contracts
for Deed, or even Equity Sharing without their inherent dangers, subterfuge
and slippery slopes.
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Legitimate loan payment take-over of virtually any mortgage, irrespective
of assume-ability… including VA, FHA, FNMA, GNMA and FHLMC (the only exception
being “Land Sale Contracts (e.g., State sponsored Veteran loans).”
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Safe Seller-Financing, that puts a stop to the potential for unscrupulous
sellers quietly (purposefully or negligently) encumbering a property or
clouding its title after an unrecorded transfer.
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Airtight Seller Carry-backs and Options wherein defaulting parties can
never claim “an equity interest” to thwart or forestall eviction.
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And (...TA-DA!)—Income property for Nothing Down And Nothing Per-Month,
without management, maintenance, vacancies or negative cash flow. An investor
need merely become a co-beneficiary with a seller willing to stay on his/her
existing loan for a while. The investor co-beneficiary then advertises for
another [resident] co-beneficiary to live in the property and pay all costs,
in exchange for ownership benefits and, say 50% of its appreciation potential
(over the next 4 or 5 years). In this scenario, the property is scheduled for
re-fi or sale at termination, and at that time, the investor is paid any
beginning equity he/she may have started with, plus a share of all
appreciation and principal reduction (profit).
The
recipe:
1. First, a seller (Herkimer and Gertrude Jones) places its property into
a land trust: i.e., vesting the property with “The Trustee for the Herkimer and
Gertrude Jones Trust.” In that the trust is an inter-vivos (i.e., living)
trust; and because it is directed solely by Herkimer and Gertrude; and since no
sale has taken place: there are no income tax consequences. And, as well… the
dreaded Due-on-Sale Clause is not violated. As a matter-of-fact, holding one’s
real property in this manner is a prudent estate-planning device, whether
conveyance to another is the objective or not [e.g., see: Get That Property out
of Your Name—Using Land Trusts for Privacy and Protection, by attorney, William.
Bronchik]. Federal law emphatically prohibits lenders from taking exception to
a borrower’s right to hold its property in this manner (re. FDIC, “Garn-St.
Germain,” 1982)
2. Next, a co-beneficiary interest in the trust (50%, 90%, etc.) is
assigned to a second party (you?).
3. Then an Agreement for Use and Possession between the trustee and the
new co-beneficiary is structured, whereupon the IRS characterized the property
as a Qualified Residence under IRC §163, even though ownership of realty by the
parties has been effectively converted to ownership of personalty [See IRC
§163(h)4(D)]. In that personalty, unlike realty, can not ordinarily be
partitioned to satisfy a judgement, this re-characterization quite effectively
serves to insulate the property from attachment by judgement creditors (even the
IRS).
Where to begin?
First,
identify “Don’t Wanters” who, in order to escape a burden, will consent to
staying on the existing loan for someone who can cover all costs, and care for
the property. The newspaper is chock full of these folks under: “Tired
Landlord,’ ‘Exasperated FSBO,’ ‘Very Desperate Seller!’ and ‘Oh God… Help
me!”
Next… seek
out (advertise for) the “Never Dreamed I Could’s” who, for ownership and tax
benefits without a down payment or loan qualifying, will eagerly cover your
closing costs and assume the recurring expense and responsibility of
homeownership.
In any
market, these “Don’t-Wanters” and “Never Dreamed I Coulds” are in endless
supply! To help them both, while helping yourself, you need but find them and
wedge yourself snugly in between them.
And when the
nay-sayers and your out-of-work brother-in-law tell you it won’t work, or that
it sounds too good to be true; tell them you know someone who’s done over a
thousand such transactions (me), without a single law suit, threat of suit… or
even a dissatisfied buyer or seller…EVER!
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