Foreclosure Rescue Statute May Prohibit Attorneys From Taking Upfront Fees In The Course Of Representing Florida Homeowners Facing Foreclosure
The flaw relates to the ability of attorneys, engaged in a typical attorney-client relationship with a Florida homeowner facing foreclosure, to charge and collect upfront legal fees from those clients. The law prohibits "foreclosure rescue consultants" from charging and collecting upfront fees for "foreclosure-related rescue services" to homeowners facing foreclosure.
A reading of the plain language of the new statute appears to include (or ensnare) attorneys among those prohibited from charging upfront fees for their services. (See
Further, the definition of the term "Foreclosure-related rescue services" in
Based on the reading of the plain language of the statute, it appears that a Technical Corrections Bill by the Florida legislature is in order to correct, what appears to be, an inadvertent but obvious flub in the drafting of the statute that ostensibly prohibits attorneys from charging upfont legal fees from homeowners that they represent in foreclosure-related legal proceedings.
For more, see New Florida Law May Hurt Homeowners in Foreclosure (New Section 501.1377 may make it impossible for homeowners to find lawyers to represent them in foreclosure or bankruptcy proceedings).
Postscript: The same issue was raised in Massachusetts in a January, 2008 article in connection with the state Attorney General's foreclosure rescue regulations - see Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly: Lawyers: unclear foreclosure regs forcing them to turn down business (Claim that new rule bars acceptance of retainers in certain types of cases).
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