Use these Alaska foreclosure procedures to avoid or stop home
foreclosure.
Alaska Statues, Vol. 2 Title 9, sections 09.45.170 et seq.; title
34, sections 34.20.070 et seq.
Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Non-judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Alaska offers two ways to borrow money against real estate, a
true mortgage, and a deed of trust. The true mortgage may be foreclosed in
Superior Court, according to the rules of equity. The deed of trust names the
trustee who will oversee the foreclosure sale by recording and posting a notice
of sale and arranging an auction to the highest bidder. Alaska law provides a
procedure to appoint a substitute trustee by recording a proper notice of the
appointment.
Preferred Method of Foreclosure: Non-judicial
deed of trust sale.
Non judicial Power of Sale Foreclosure
The deed of trust must be foreclosed according to its own terms,
provided those terms are consistent with the minimum protections of
Alaskas laws.
Preliminary Notices
Recording
Not less than 30 days after the default and not less than three
months before the sale, the trust will record notice of default stating the
name of the borrower and the book and page where the trust deed is recorded. It
must describe the property, the borrowers default, the amount the
borrower owes, and the trustees desire to sell. It must give the date,
time and place of the sale.
Mailing
Within ten days after recording the notice of default, the
trustee must mail a copy of the same by certified mail to the last know address
of (1) the borrower, and (2) any person whose claim or lien on the property
appears of record or is known to the lender of trustee and (3) any occupant.
The trustee may have the notice delivered personally instead of sending it by
certified mail.
Reinstatement Rights
Any time before the sale, the borrower may cure the default and
stop the sale by paying a sum equal tot he missed payments plus attorneys
fees. The lender may not require the borrower to pay off the entire remaining
principal balance of the loan to cure the default, just the missed payments and
attorneys fees. If the lender has recorded a notice of default two or
more times, then the Alaska statutes provide that the lender can refuse to
accept the borrowers monies for the missed payments and attorneys
fees and proceed with the foreclosure sale instead.
Sale Procedures
Place of Sale
The front door of the Superior Court for the judicial district
where the property is located, unless the deed of trust specifies another
location.
Manner of Sale
The trustee can conduct the auction or bring in an auctioneer to
call out the sale.
Postponement
The trustee can postpone the sale by giving the person who
conducts the sale a signed and written postponement request moving the
foreclosure to a difference time and place, which must be publicly announced at
the time and place originally fixed for the sale.
Terms
The trustee must sell to the highest and best bidder. The lender
may bid at auction. The trustees deed must give the book and page where
both the original deed trust and the default notice were recorded. It must
state the notice of default was property mailed. It must give the time, place
and manner in which the foreclosure sale was conducted, and the amount paid for
the property at foreclosure. After the sale, the trustee must record an
affidavit that the notice of default was property mailed.
Redemption
If the lender forecloses by means of an out-of-court foreclosure
sale under a deed of trust, then the borrower has no right to redeem the
property. However, the borrower does have the right to redeem if the sale was
the result of a lawsuit and a court order commanding the sale.
Deficiency
Judicial foreclosure permits a deficiency suit. However, if the
lender forecloses through an out-of-court foreclosure sale under the deed of
trust, then the lender may not sue for a deficiency judgment afterward.
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