Q: Does an Agreed Order end all disputes between two parties, meaning they cannot rehash it out at another time?
My attorney and my lenders attorney signed an agreed order revoking a substitute trustee sale snd ejoining them from non judicial foreclosure on a certain date. A year after they sell my house. Should the Agreed Order stopped them? Will that fact affect it now because it was supposed to resolve everything?
A:
Before you attempt to assert my answer as being 100% correct, I need to advise you either to read the entire "Agreed Order" and figure it out yourself, or ask your current lawyer, or hire a different Texas lawyer to explain what appears to have happened in your old foreclosure case.
My answer: Unless I miss my educated guess the "certain date" mentioned in the Agreed Order has come and gone. If that is what happened, the Agreed Order has no force or effect anymore because it expired by its own terms.
IMO, what should concern you most at this point, is why you were not advised of the entry of final judgment and the date of the judicial sale? In Florida, homeowners must be allowed to bid on the foreclosed property.
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