Use these Minnesota foreclosure procedures to avoid or stop
home foreclosure.
Minnesota Statues Annotated, Vol 37, Section 580.02 et seq.,
581.10 582.14 et seq.
Minnesota
Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Non-judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Minnesota allows foreclosure in two ways: by advertisement and
by court action. If court action is selected, the lender must file a lawsuit
and obtain a judgment for the amount due and a court order commanding the
property to be sold. Prior to attempting any foreclosure, the lender should
give at least 30 days' notice of the existence of a default. For agricultural
property, complex mandatory mediation procedures must be followed.
Non-judicial Sale by Advertisement
If the mortgage contains a power of sale clause, it may be
foreclosed by advertisement. However, a number of conditions must be met before
sale by advertisement can be undertaken.
- There must be a default on the mortgage,
- no lawsuit to collect on the mortgage may be underway,
- the mortgage itself and any assignments of the mortgage to
new lenders must have been recorded and
- the notice must be given eight weeks before foreclosure on a
homestead.
If an attorney is involved in the foreclosure, the attorney's
authority must be shown by a power of attorney that has been properly recorded.
Attorney's fees are set by statute for foreclosure sales. Hence, the borrower
cannot be billed indiscriminately for attorney's fees during the foreclosure
process.
Certificate of Sale
After the sale, the sheriff will prepare a certificate showing
the amount of the sale and the amount left unpaid on the loan.
Special Procedure - Right of First Refusal
Borrowers have a complex right of first refusal when land is
acquired by a state agency, a federal agency, a limited partnership or a
corporation (other than a family farm corporation). Once the agency or business
acquires land by foreclosure, it will ultimately try to resell it. When it
tries to resell, the old owner who lost the property in foreclosure must be
offered the property in preference to any other purchaser at the price and
terms an outside buyer is willing to accept for the property. The lender must
make a good-faith effort to let the old owner buy it first, hence the term
right of first refusal. The law applies for the first five years after the
property was foreclosed on. The right of first refusal may not be waived or
assigned, except to family members by inheritance.
Deficiency
Any deficiency is limited to the difference between the fair
market value of the property, as determined by a jury, and the unpaid balance
remaining on the old loan. To recover a deficiency judgment against the
borrower, the lender must file a lawsuit against the borrower. If the lender
already seeks foreclosure by a lawsuit, then all the lender has to do is add a
claim to the existing lawsuit. However, when the foreclosure is by
advertisement, then an independent lawsuit must be filed to recover a
deficiency.
Redemption
Redemption is unusual in Minnesota. The borrower or a junior
lien holder has up to one year after the foreclosure to redeem the property by
making all the past due payments rather than the entire loan balance after
acceleration.
Preliminary Notices
The foreclosure notice must name the borrower the original
lender, any takeover lender, the original loan amount, the date of the
mortgage, recording information, the amount currently due on the loan including
back taxes and unpaid insurance, a property description, the time and place of
the impending foreclosure sale and the time allowed by law for the borrower to
redeem the property.
Sale Procedures
Before the sale, the lender must file a verified, itemized
statement with the sheriff showing the amount due. This statement must be read
during the sale b the sheriff.
The time, place and date of the foreclosure are set forth in
the foreclosure notice.
In Minnesota, the actual foreclosure sale must be conducted by
public auction. The sale is to the highest bidder.
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