Just my personal opinion.
There are legal things that are nonetheless unmoral (slavery, for example).
That I'm aware of, the law only provides a few categories of debt (back taxes, student loans, etc) that are non dis-chargeable. Every other debt is by law dis-chargeable, either in bankruptcy or through other processes.
By law, a lender of an unsecured loan SHOULD do its due diligence because the lender is on the hook if the borrower fails to pay.
So, explain to me how a viking ship is not a legal process to legally get rid of a timeshare that an HOA refuses to take back?
This is similar to filling out a loan application with false information. If the Bank lends the money, the onus is on the lender to prove they were defrauded (a tall order most times).
Amoral yes, but until proven guilty, viking ships seem quite legal to me. Of course, viking ships only work when resorts acknowledge the ownership transfer, which these days seems to be getting harder and harder.
Also, I think that an HOA that does not have a process to take back deeds behaves both legally and amorally.
A lender in this country and quite a few others just does not have the right to permanently collect from their debtors against the debtors wishes, except for back taxes, student loans, etc. HOAs may try to confuse this reality by making relatively minor legal points, but there is, to my knowledge, no legal basis for an HOA's claim that timeshare owners MUST continue to pay their maintenance dues in perpetuity.
I hope new regulations from he CFBP will include a timeshare owners right to deed back a timeshare to an HOA at any point, regardless of whether a loan is owed on the timeshare.
Financial Regulators Are Looking Into America’s Largest Timeshare Seller
https://www.buzzfeed.com/matthewzei...argest-times?utm_term=.eqBd8okWx1#.ijKle3AwQL