- Joined
- Nov 9, 2018
I just came here to see if Yaniv is homeless yet.
Is he homeless yet????
Is he homeless yet????
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Not yet. IIRC, the foreclosure process in Canada usually takes at least 6 months, so check back in around September.I just came here to see if Yaniv is homeless yet.
Is he homeless yet????
Now I know what Rocky Dennis would have looked like if he’d transitioned and gained 300 pounds.This was posted on the Langley crime page on Facebook.
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If we’re talking isms then cannibalism is definitely on the table. Would not be surprised to read that a ‘woman’ has been arrested in connection with the discovery of homeless people’s partially butchered bodies. I mean if he’s banned from Olive Garden then it’s his next best move.Even if he did get botulinism who would even be able to tell?
Big Jon wouldn't know authentic if it smacked him in the face like a days old dead fish, at this point. (Incidentally, when I see a picture of him, that's the smell that comes to mind.)Meowmix have been booted off of X for "violating authenticity" (whatever the fuck that means).
Looks like Jon has been manipulating things again.
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I think it was more of a sacrificial account anyway.No real loss to the Mix. No one with a brain uses the former Twatter aka X anyway.
You run that risk when you name yourself after a well-known cat food brand. Maybe Yaniv or someone else tipped off [checks Wikipedia] the Smucker's Company? Really? Huh.
I think I figured out why he was actually trying to get a bunch of minority women put out of business. I think he wanted to get into the business of genital waxing for women and knew he'd only be able to succeed if he got rid of the competition. Apart from being an abortionist, there's no job a tranny would love more than doing genital waxing of women.
I think I figured out why he was actually trying to get a bunch of minority women put out of business. I think he wanted to get into the business of genital waxing for women and knew he'd only be able to succeed if he got rid of the competition. Apart from being an abortionist, there's no job a tranny would love more than doing genital waxing of women.
The foreclosure process
Foreclosures are started by petition, under the Supreme Court Civil Rules. If there are no special circumstances to suggest a lender should delay starting a foreclosure, the process is usually started around the third month that the mortgage is in default. The law requires the borrower to be served with the petition.
In most mortgage default cases, there is no formal trial on the issue of default. Because the default is usually not seriously in doubt, and because in most instances debtors do not have a defence to the claim for the amount owed, the Supreme Court Civil Rules allow foreclosures to be heard in a fairly summary manner.
The first hearing is usually held in Supreme Court Chambers — a special, more informal setting of the Supreme Court, where the evidence is presented through affidavits, rather than oral testimony of witnesses. The first hearing is sometimes referred to as an application for an “order nisi”, which is the main order in foreclosure proceedings. The first hearing is usually held within three weeks to a month of when the petition was served on the borrowers, and is likely to be over in a matter of minutes unless the foreclosure is contested.
At the first hearing, the lender asks for a number of court orders, including judgment against the borrowers, legal costs, and an order setting the length of time that the borrowers have to come up with enough money to at least pay the arrears. That period of time is called the “redemption period”. Under very historic principles of equity law, as well as under section 16(2) of the Law and Equity Act, that redemption period must be six months unless a shorter or longer period is justified.
Increasingly, lenders are applying for and courts are granting shortened redemption periods, particularly in cases where the debtor has little or no equity in the property.
At the end of the redemption period, the lender has a choice of remedies:
Sometimes, before the redemption period expires, a mortgagee or another creditor (for example, a second or subsequent mortgage lender, or creditor with a judgment registered against the title) will ask for “conduct of sale”. In some instances, then, a borrower may find they cannot stay on the property during the full length of the redemption period.
- apply to the court to have the title to the property transferred to the lender’s name (called obtaining a “final order of foreclosure”), or
- apply to the court to have the property sold (called obtaining “conduct of sale”).