Thursday, January 18, 2007

California Foreclosure Laws

California Foreclosure is Non-Judicial.

California Foreclosure Timeline

Day 1-Day 90
Redemption Period
Lasts 90 days from the recordation of the Notice of Default

Day 90-Day 120
Publication Period
Lasts 30 days from the end of Redemption

Day 120-Day 141
Trustee's Sale

Held 21 days after first publication

Redemption Period
Once the Notice of Default records the foreclosure time frame begins. California foreclosure law states that within 10 business days a copy of the recorded Notice of Default is sent by certified and regular mail to the borrowers at all addresses provided and any recorded special requests. Within 30 days a copy of the Notice of Default is sent by certified and regular mail to new owners and all junior lien holders to the Deed of Trust being foreclosed. A Trustee's Sale Guarantee Report is ordered from the title company providing all title information. The foreclosure remains dormant for the next 60 days unless the borrower makes contact to cure.

Publication Period
California foreclosure law states that the publication period begins once the redemption period has expired. A Notice of Trustee's Sale is prepared and published in an adjudicated paper of general circulation in the city in which the property is located. The Notice of Trustee's Sale is published one time per week for three weeks. The actual Sale is established by adding at least 20 days to the date that the Notice of Trustee's Sale was first published in the newspaper. The Notice of Trustee's Sale is posted on the property and in a public place. At least 14 days period to Sale date the Notice of Trustee's Sale must be recorded in the county in which the property is located.

Trustee's Sale
California foreclosure law states that on the day that was established for sale of the property, and only after all publication period requirements have been met, the property is sold to the highest bidder for cash for the full amount of the debt plus foreclosure fee and expenses. If no one bids at the Trustee's Sale, the property automatically reverts back to the beneficiary for the debt. A Trustee's Deed Upon Sale is recorded in the county in which the property is located transferring title to the foreclosing beneficiary allowing the marketing of the property to recover their debt.
All sales under a power of sale in a deed of trust will be made between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on any business day, Monday through Friday, at the time specified in the notice of trustee sale. The sale must be made a public auction to the highest bidder. The trustee has the right to require every bidder to show evidence of ability to pay the full bid in cash, cashier�s check or certain bank checks. Each bid is by law an irrevocable offer to purchase. However, a higher bid cancels an earlier bid. It is unlawful and a criminal offense (a fine of $10,000 or up to one year in jail) to offer anyone consideration not to bid, or to fix or restrain the bidding process in any manner. Debtors may reinstate up to five days before non-judicial foreclosure sale.
Junior lien holders may no longer redeem, so they may try to protect themselves by (1) advancing funds to bring the senior loan payments current, then foreclosing for the sums advanced; (2) bidding at the foreclosure sale so the price will be sufficient to pay off the senior and the junior liens; or (3) acquire the property by bidding at the foreclosure. If the debtor has a right to redeem and does so, the junior who purchased the home must be reimbursed. Junior liens do not reattach the property if a borrower redeems a senior lien whose foreclosure extinguished the junior. This helps borrowers by encouraging the junior to bid up to the property to fair market value at the foreclosure sale, or else lose out, giving borrowers closer to fair value at sale.
Lenders may not seek a deficiency judgment if (1) the foreclosure is non-judicial or if (2) foreclosure is on a purchase money obligation. The same rules do not apply to guarantee or later lien holders. The lenders may seize alternative collateral. If the lender forecloses by filing a lawsuit, then the lender can obtain both a foreclosure sale order and a judgment against the borrower for a deficiency after the court-ordered sale, but only for the difference between the judgment and the fair value of the security.

VA Loans
An appraisal should be ordered through an authorized VA appraiser 60 days from the recording of the Notice of Default. A completed VA567 from should be sent to the local VA office with a copy of the Notice of Trustee's Sale and Trustee's Sale Guarantee once publication of the Notice of Trustee's Sale has begun. A Corporation Grant Deed should be prepared conveying title from the foreclosing beneficiary to the proper governmental agency.

FHA Loans
A Notice to Occupant of Pending Acquisition should be mailed to mortgagee with a copy of the cover letter to the local FHA office. A Corporation Grant Deed should be prepared conveying title from the foreclosing beneficiary to the proper governmental agency. If the property is occupied, an eviction process must be started to convey the title to FHA unoccupied. Once eviction complete, record Corporation Grant Deed and issue title package to FHA for Title Approval Record Corporation Grant Deed and issue FHA 27011 Part A.

3 comments:

CentralValley said...

Real estate market in Fresno is going south in a big way as more and more homes are foreclosed on. Bank short sales and REO(s) should rise dramatically in the next 18 months. The houses were being used as an ATM machine so many people have no choice, but to walk away now that the market is in a recession. The high inventory numbers, rising interest rates and all-time low affordabilty rate in this area is causing a tremendous amount of stress on homeowners. The market today remains me of the 1994-97 market here in Fresno where houses too forever to sell. The problems are just beginning in my opinion and the cracks in the foundation are growing ever larger each day.

Mid-State Realty said...

I agree centralvalley...hey did you see the article in the Fresno Bee today (1/25/06) it said about everything you just said

CentralValley said...

Yes, mid-state realty I did see the article in the Fresno Bee last Thursday regarding the situation surrounding foreclosures in Fresno area. I follow the market and read most of the articles that relate to the overall real estate market in many different areas around the country. I was not surprised that article was finally printed because the L.A. Times printed a similar story regarding the foreclosures in there market with appreciation rates going side ways or falling.
I blog on regular basis on another website dedicated to the real estate bubble. They posted articles on a daily basis from numerous areas around the country regarding the real estate market. The articles around the country I read on a weekly basis are so similar to the Fresno Bee article it's down right scary to be honest. The sub prime market is in trouble and I believe 13 or more sub prime lenders have gone under with more announcements coming as defaults rise. We need to tighten the lending standards because too many people do not understand the loans they are receiving. The consumers are part of the problem not just the mortgage brokers because they feel I can afford it today (the old here and now), but not in 3 or 4 years when the loan adjusts higher. You are buying too big of a house and need to settle for something smaller so you have a lower payment; however maybe it takes a foreclosure for people to finally figure this out. Then the foreclosure ruins their credit and then they must start over to a large extend.
Their also needs to be a dramatic cut back in interest only, ARM(s) and 100% financing to consumers because these homeowners are already on the edge now and if there loan resets that may trigger a NOD letter from the lender. You should have a lot of business going forward it looks like you guys manage a lot of REO(s) right now; however the numbers should rise considerable as foreclosures rise. I believe in the near future banks will end up selling for 100-150K below market value in order to move properties that are not selling on the open market. These non-performing assets (REOs) on the banks books are not good if too many pile up over time especially considering the once in a generation housing boom ending in August 2005. This is not the bottom of the market for this cycle by any means too many in the industry and have simply lost there minds becasue many of these loans are just starting to adjust higher.
What are you hearing from the banks regarding the foreclosure situation? Are they motivated to sell or not?