| WASHINGTON,
March 2005
–
Federal law prohibits mortgage lenders from
immediately foreclosing on homes owned by
servicemembers deployed overseas on military
duty, a senior legal officer noted here.
All servicemembers, including those
deployed, are protected under the
Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, signed by
President Bush on Dec. 19, 2003, said Army
Col. Christopher Garcia, director of legal
policy at the Office of the Undersecretary
of Defense for Personnel and Readiness.
“The SCRA includes a provision that
protects against default judgment. In any
civil action, such as a lawsuit or a
foreclosure, in which the defendant does not
make an appearance, the court must require
the plaintiff bringing the suit to file an
affidavit saying whether or not the other
party in the lawsuit is a servicemember,”
Garcia explained.
And, if the party being sued for
foreclosure or some other debt action is a
servicemember, Garcia continued, “then the
SCRA requires the judge to do certain things
to protect the servicemember’s rights” under
the law.
For example, he said, the courts “are
required to stay the court proceedings for a
minimum of 90 days until the servicemember
can be present to assert a defense.” Most
often, such court cases are delayed until
the servicemember has completed his or her
overseas deployment, Garcia pointed out.
Garcia said he had no specific information
regarding recent news reports saying some
deployed servicemembers have had their homes
foreclosed on or had other assets seized in
contradiction to the law.
Business-community compliance with the SCRA
“generally has been very good,” Garcia
noted. Yet, he acknowledged, there’ve been
“isolated cases of noncompliance.” This
usually occurs, Garcia said, “when a lender,
or landlord, or other person dealing with a
servicemember is unaware of the law.”
After lenders and other creditors become
aware of the law, they usually comply with
it, Garcia said.
All active, Reserve and Guard troops on
active duty, Garcia said, can contact their
local military legal assistance officers to
assist them in enforcing SCRA-specified
rights.
Servicemembers and their family members can
personally visit legal assistance offices. A
legal assistance attorney can “draft a
letter or make a phone call,” he pointed
out. If the creditor refuses to comply with
the SCRA, either the servicemember can sue
privately, or the Department of Justice can
bring an enforcement action in federal
court.
The SCRA is an update to the Soldiers and
Sailors Civil Relief Act of 1940, which was
established to provide protections to
deployed troops who have difficulty meeting
their personal financial and legal
obligations due to their military service.
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