HELPFUL DEFINITIONS OF COMMON FORECLOSURE TERMS

Property type: Market Conditions · City/Town:

Listing price:

Ever confused when hearing or reading about foreclosure terms then continue reading and hopefully this will help you!

If you are either in the process of buying or selling a foreclosure property, understanding the basic terms will help you ask appropriate questions of your REALTOR®, the escrow officer, the lender or other parties involved in this real estate  transaction.  This can expedite the time frame of the process for everyone involved including you.

Below are some of the most common terms used in connection with the foreclosure process:

A Deed of Trust: A Deed of Trust is the security for your loan.  It is the formal document that is recorded in the public records.

A Deed of Trust contains three parties:

  1. The Trustor, which is the borrower
  2. The Trustee, which is an entity that holds “bare or legal” title
  3. The Beneficiary, which is the lender

The Deed of Trust is an instrument that identifies the following:

  • Original loan amount
  • Legal description of the property being used as security for the mortgage
  • The parties involved
  • Inception and maturity date of the loan
  • Provisions of the mortgage and requirements
  • Legal procedures
  • Late fees

Acceleration and alienation clauses:  Riders, if any, regarding such clauses as prepayment penalties or terms of an adjustable rate mortgage

Notice of Default: Lenders file in the public records where the property is located a public notice called the Notice of Default. It states that the borrower is in default, behind in the mortgage payments, and if the payments are not paid up, the lender will seize the home. In California, lenders typically do not file a Notice of Default until the borrower is at least 60 days behind in making payments. Lenders must then wait 90 days. During that 90-day period, the borrower has the right to make up the back payments and reinstate the loan. After 90 days, the lender is required to publish a notice in the newspaper for 20 days and then may sell the property to the highest acceptable bidder on the courthouse steps. If no acceptable bid is received, the trustee then conveys the property to the lender. Most of these dates are at the earliest allowable time frames.

Deed-in-Lieu of Foreclosure: A potential option taken by a mortgagor (a borrower) to avoid foreclosure under which the mortgagor deeds the collateral property (the home) back to the mortgagee (the lender) in exchange for the release of all obligations under the mortgage. Many lenders are moving in this direction in 2010.

Foreclosure: Legal proceeding by which a borrower’s rights to a mortgaged property may be extinguished if the borrower fails to live up to the obligations agreed to in the loan contract. The lender may then declare the entire debt due and owing and may seek to satisfy it by foreclosing. Foreclosure is commonly by a court-decreed sale of the property to the highest bidder, who is often the lender.  As we all know, foreclosures continue to be in the news and continue to dominate the market in 2010 and will continue in 2011.  This means that REALTORS®, struggling homeowners, and potential buyers need to have information about the process and terms of foreclosure in order to make important decisions about the sale or purchase of a property.

So if you receive any letters, phone calls or read any information about foreclosures, please do not hesitate to contact me to discuss your options when buying or selling.  As you can see, the sooner you make a decision about buying or selling a foreclosure, the better off you can be in this struggling market.

Danny Dominguez
Windermere Real Estate