If you live in New York and are facing foreclosure, please see below for the foreclosure process.

When you develop a definite plan of action with well-timed, well-informed steps, you can stop the foreclosure process and save your home. We have outlined the foreclosure process for the state of New York.


Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Non-Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes

Preferred Method: Judicial Foreclosure

Judicial foreclosure (foreclosure by lawsuit) is the primary method of foreclosure in New York. Although non-judicial foreclosure is available, it is seldom used. Non-judicial foreclosure procedures are sufficiently intricate to lead to potential title disputes. Such problems might make it very difficult to evict a tenant. Junior lien holders might also dispute the title and tie the matter up in litigation. Thus most lenders will elect a judicial foreclosure.

Judicial Foreclosure

Judicial foreclosure begins when the lender files a lawsuit. The lender will sue the borrower and any person who has a claim to the ownership or a possession interest. The lender, as plaintiff, has a summons and a complaint served on the borrower. The summons commands the borrower to come to court and answer the lender’s complaint; the complaint is the lawsuit proper, which describes the lender’s legal and factual basis for foreclosure. A notice of lis pendens must be filed. The lis pendens is a notice that a lawsuit is pending, the outcome of which affects title. Often, the borrower fails to answer. In that event, the court will appoint a referee to compute a figure for the foreclosure. The court may then sign a judgment of foreclosure and sale. If the borrower appears and defends against the lawsuit, then the court will determine the merits of the defense. The referee will need an oral hearing. If the lender wins, then a judgment of foreclosure and sale will be awarded.

Typically the foreclosure sale is advertised for 4 to 6 weeks. The sale is made by public auction to the highest bidder. The lender may bid, as well. The lender must distribute the proceeds according to the terms of the judgment signed by the judge. Surplus money will normally be held by a referee.

Deficiency

If the mortgage contains an express covenant to pay, then the lender may seek a deficiency judgment against the borrower if the court ordered sale does not produce sufficient funds. The lender can ask the court for a deficiency judgment for the amount left unpaid after the foreclosure sale. The motion for the deficiency judgment must be made within 90 days after the foreclosure sale. The court must determine the market value and credit the greater of the market value or the foreclosure sales price against what remains unpaid on the loan.

Redemption

After the judicial foreclosure, there is no redemption period. This is true of non-judicial foreclosure, as well.

 

C Thompson

Case Manager

407-219-8739

My Website

Click Here for Loan Modification Scams

Click Here for Investor Foreclosures


 

 

 
This post has been included in New York Information

2 Comments on New York (NY) Foreclosure Process

SEP
09
162,396 Points

  GREAT blog for the people in New York who may need assistance.  Good luck assisting all across the country with your service.  have a wonderful week

9:16am • #1
Outside Blog

Thanks Lynn! I am always trying to keep the public in the loop. They deserve to know what they are up against. The worst thing in the world is to "not know". Take care and thanks for commenting!

9:25am • #2

Leave a response…



(optional)
What does the graphic say?
 
Rainmaker_large

C Thompson Sr. Loss Mitigation Specialist

Clermont, FL

More about me…

Loan Modification

Address: Nationwide Assistance, Clermont, FL, 34713

Office Phone: (407) 219-8739

Email Me


If you find this information helpful vote here.

Top Blogs Real Estate Finance Blogs Blog Directory by Blog Flux Personal Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory

To share this information with others click here

Bookmark and Share

Wal-Mart.com USA, LLC
AppliancePartsPros.com, Inc.

The New 3G S



Links

Archives

RSS 2.0 Feed for this blog

Find FL real estate agents and Clermont real estate on ActiveRain.