wolveraptor wrote:From an ethical standpoint, the whole "it's your fault for giving it to me in the first place!" argument doesn't make much sense to me. If I ask for 1000 dollars from one of my friends, and he gives it to me against his better judgement, aren't I still the asshole if I don't pay him back in a timely manner? Do the rules really change depending on scale?
You're an asshole for not paying him back, and he's a moron for giving you the money. It's not an either/or situation, everyone's guilty.
Darth Wong wrote:I would argue that if someone takes out a loan he knows he might not be able to pay back and uses his house as collateral, he is knowingly agreeing to the possibility that the bank will foreclose. If he should scream "injustice" when the bank does come to foreclose on his house, that quite frankly strikes me as utter bullshit.
Honestly, it makes a mockery of the entire concept of collateral to say that foreclosure is some kind of inherent injustice. The whole point of collateral is to allow you to borrow money that you would not ordinarily be trusted to pay back reliably. In effect, it seems that people think the concept of collateral itself is inherently predatory.
Sure, there's a ton of people who did that during the housing bubble and got cornholed starting a couple years back. I've said that all those people who took out questionable loans along with the bankers and real estate agents who enabled all that fraud so that everyone could flip houses and pocket a quick buck should be investigated, prosecuted, and tossed in jail. The dumbass who takes out a HELOC to buy a luxury car and plasma TVs should get his shit repo'd and the bank gets to eat all the losses.
But that assumes the bank has all the papers to prove its case and that all the numbers actually work out. If the bank can't prove how much it's owed, is missing half the papers and can't get the numbers straight, they should get their case tossed out of court. That's like me printing up some papers on my computer and scribbling a signature on it, then using that to sue you for $50,000. It would get laughed at so hard it wouldn't be funny.
And that's the case here. The bank couldn't prove what it was owed, pulled numbers out of thin air, and got caught doing so multiple times. A reasonable person would conclude that the bank is full of shit and that the loan is fraudulent, which would be a reasonable basis for voiding the entire thing. You can't enforce an illegal contract, which is what a fraudulent loan would fall under.