Monthly Archives: July 2009

Couple sue over reverse mortgage

REVERSE mortgages – launched with much fanfare over a decade ago to help retirees unlock the cash value of their homes – will, for the first time, be at the centre of an upcoming court case.

Mr Derek Chua, 72, and his wife Madam Colleen Ng, 57, have filed a suit against insurer NTUC Income after their reverse mortgage turned sour.

In the writ of summons obtained by The Straits Times, the couple claim that the reverse mortgage scheme entitled Mr Chua to live in the property until he died or sold the property.

They also claim that Income was not entitled to force them to repay the loan if the loan exceeded 80 per cent of their property’s market value.

When the reverse mortgage scheme was launched in 1997, it was seen by the Government as a way for the elderly to get some income from their homes without having to move out.

It offered an income stream for cash-poor but asset-rich retirees. They could use their homes as security for a loan that would be dispensed in monthly cash payouts. Continue reading

Cove Devt seeks extension of deadline to remove illegal partitions

Cove Development, which owns the Grangeford condominium off Orchard Road, has asked the Ministry of National Development to extend the deadline to remove all illegal partitions that had been erected at the property.

Demolition works were supposed to be completed by Monday (27 July).

But Cove only managed to recover all 171 apartment units on Saturday (25 July) after it obtained a Writ of Possession for locked apartments and evicted the remaining recalcitrant tenants.

The tenants had previously been given till 12 noon on 22 July to vacate the premises after court orders were obtained.

Grangeford had earlier made headlines when authorities discovered that some 141 apartments had illegally been converted into 600 units through the use of the partitions.

Source : Channel NewsAsia – 27 Jul 2009