Use these Colorado foreclosure procedures to avoid or stop
home foreclosure.
Colorado Revised Statues 1973, Vol. 16, Title 38, Sections
38-37-101 et seq.; 38-39-101 et seq.
Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Non-judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Public Trustee - A Colorado Concept
In contrast to most states, where the trustee is usually the
hired gun of the lender, Colorado has an impartial, accountable, "public
trustee" appointed by the Governor for each county, who handles power of sale
foreclosures on request. The public trustee may take only the compensation set
by law. A private lender engages a public trustee by filing with the trustee
two copies of a notice of election and demand for sale, the original note or a
suitable bond and a mailing list of persons who must receive foreclosures
notices.
Non-judicial Foreclosure
Preliminary Notices
Advertising
A notice of sale stating the time and place of the foreclosure
must be advertised in accordance with the terms of the deed of trust, but under
Colorado law all deeds of trust must prescribe a weekly advertising period for
the notice of sale in a newspaper of general circulation, of not less than four
weeks.
Recording
The public trustee must record the lenders notice of
election and demand for sale.
Mailing
The public trustee must mail, within ten days after the
publication of the notice of election and demand for sale, a copy of the same
and a notice of sale as published in the newspaper, to the borrower and any
owner or claimant of record, at the address given in the recorded instrument.
The public trustee must also mail, at lease 21 days before the foreclosure
sale, a notice to the borrower describing how to redeem the property.
Right-to-Cure Default
If the loan default is due to nonpayment, then the borrower can
give notice of an intention to cure the default at least seven days before the
foreclosure sale. The trustee must then, on request, investigate and tell the
borrower the sum due on the loan. If, on or before 12:00 noon of the day before
the date of the sale, the owners, parties or borrowers pay to the officer
conducting the sale all delinquent principal and interest payments that are due
as of the date of such payment, plus costs, expenses, late charges and
attorneys fees, but not future principal (since no extra debt is allowed
due to acceleration) then the foreclosure must be stopped. This right my be
exercised more than one time.
Sale Procedures
Date
The foreclosure sale must be held between 45 days and 60 days
after the recording of the election and demand for sale.
Place
The public trustee may conduct the sale at any door or entrance
to a courthouse, not withstanding the deed of trusts provisions, or the
trustee may conduct the sale at the location specified in the deed of trust.
Post-Sale Matters
The trustee will pay an excess proceeds from the foreclosure sale
to creditors in order of their priority, and the balance to the grantor, who
has five years to claim it. Title is conveyed by deed to the higher bidder, who
may be the lender.
Deficiency
The lender may sue for a deficiency.
Redemption
The borrower has 75 days after the date of sale to redeem the
premises by paying the public trustee the sum for which the property was sole,
with interest. A variety of redemption periods exists for junior lien holders.
Special rights exist in the case of agricultural borrowers.
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