Use these Connecticut foreclosure procedures to avoid or stop
home foreclosure.
Connecticut General Statues Annotated, Vol. 22A Section 49-14,
49-17 et seq.
Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Non-judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Preferred Method
Judicial foreclosure. Connecticut allows foreclosure by two
strange judicial methods, strict foreclosure and decree of sale.
Strict Foreclosure
Connecticut is one of the few states that still uses strict
foreclosure. In strict foreclosure, there is not foreclosure sale at all, not
even at the courthouse steps. The lender must go to court and obtain a court
order showing the borrower to be in default under the terms of the mortgage. At
that point, title shifts to the lender. However, the borrower has a length of
time set by the court to redeem the property. If the borrower fails to come up
with the money during that time, then the borrower is forever barred from
asserting a claim to the property and title becomes absolute in the lender.
From that date, the lender has one month to record a certificate of foreclosure
describing the premises, the mortgage, the foreclosure proceedings, and the
date title became absolute. If the lender demands possession in the foreclosure
suite, the court may issue an execution of ejectment against the person in
possession of the property. Possession may also be obtained by peaceable entry,
unless the mortgage says otherwise. The disadvantage to the borrower is that
the lender obtains title to land that might be worth much more that what was
owed on the original loan. This is fort of windfall profit for the lender.
Decree of Sale
Upon motion by any party, a court may allow a mortgage to be
foreclosed by a decree of sale. In a decree of sale, the court will appoint a
committee to sell the property. The court also sets the time and manner of the
sale. The court further appoints three appraisers. The borrower may stop the
proceedings at any time by paying the balance due on the loan. If not, the
committee will make the sale. Afterwards, the sale will be ratified by the
court which executes a deed to the purchaser. The grantee in the deed may
obtain possession of the property by court order. A supplemental judgment can
direct the distribution of the proceeds of the sale. The lender need only bring
those proceeds to court which exceed the balance due on the loan, which
included interests and costs.
Special Protections for Unemployed Borrowers
If a residential borrower has lived in the home as a principal
residence for at least two years, and the borrower (1) has not had a
foreclosure action commenced against him or her in the past seven years, and
(2) is unemployed or underemployed as defined by law, then the borrower can
claim protection from foreclosure under Connecticut statues. Borrowers are
underemployed or unemployed under Connecticut law if the aggregate earned
income of all the homeowners of the real property during the year preceding the
foreclosure was under $50,000 and less that 75 percent of the average aggregate
annual income during the two years prior to one year before foreclosure.
Eligibility
A court may decide that borrowers are eligible for special
protection after considering two criteria: (1) the likelihood the borrower will
be able to make timely payments on a restructured mortgage by the time a
restructuring period ends and the likelihood of a substantial prejudice to a
lender or a subordinate lien holder due to the restructuring of the mortgage
debt.
Protection from Foreclosure
Under Connecticut law borrowers can get two forms of protection:
foreclosure is stopped during the restructuring period. Which may last up to
six months, and borrowers can obtain court ordered restructuring of their
mortgage so as to eliminate overdue payments.
Restructuring the Loan
The ceiling for restructured debt is either (1) the amount of the
original debt or (2) 90 percent of the fair market value of the property as
determined by an appraiser at the time of the restructure. No additional debt
may be restructured. Missed payments can be added to the balance of the loan in
a Connecticut restructure. However, the borrower must pay interest on the
amount in arrears that is added to the loan. Interest accrues on any sums added
to the old mortgage debt at the end of the restructuring period, which may be
fixed or variable, depending on the original note. A composite rate must be
used on fixed rate loans so that the restructured debt must pay current
interest rates which the main part of the loan continues at its original rate.
Such composite rates are not necessary for variable interest rate loans.
Deficiency Judgment
The strict foreclosure proceeding does not include an action
against the borrower for payment, but the lender can sue the borrower directly.
In an independent action brought prior to or during the strict foreclosure
proceeding. Once the borrowers time limit to pay the balance due on the
loan expires, the lender obtains title to the property. If the property is
worth more than the balance owed on the loan, the lender cannot sue for a
deficiency. Please not, the lender receives all the equity in the property
without paying anything in this situation. In proceedings to foreclosure by
sale rather than by strict foreclosure, additional proceedings to collect a
debt from the borrower are stayed during the suit seeking a sale. If the
proceeds of the sale exceed the appraised value of the property , but are not
enough to pay the lenders past due loan balance, then a deficiency
judgment may be rendered against the borrower. If at the court-ordered sale,
the property is sold for less than the appraised value, then no other
proceedings to collect the debt from the borrower may be undertaken until
one-half the difference between the debt and the appraised value is subtracted
from what the borrower owes the lender.
Redemption
Redemption is determined by the court in strict foreclosure.
Redemption by a junior lien holder is subject to any prior liens.
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