Use these Missouri foreclosure procedures to avoid or stop
home foreclosure.
Vernon's Annotated Missouri Statutes, Vol. 23, Sections 443.290
et seq. Montana - Montana Code Annotated 1981, Vol. 3, Sections 25-13-801 et
seq.
The Process
Missouri permits two types of foreclosure:
- Judicial, and
- Judicial under a power of sale clause.
In judicial foreclosure the lender may file a petition in the
office of the circuit court against the borrower and the tenants or occupiers
or property. The petition states the nature of the mortgage and formally
requests the court to render judgment for amount of the debt, to foreclose the
equity of redemption (preventing the borrower from recovering the property by
paying the mortgage) and to order the property sold to satisfy the amount due.
Such a lawsuit will be handled in the same manner as other civil lawsuits. The
borrower may be served in person or by constructive notice through publication
if personal service efforts prove to be fruitless.
Power of Sale Foreclosures
Missouri permits foreclosure under a power of sale clause. in a
mortgage. Before proceeding with a foreclosure sale under the power of sale
clause, the lender must give the borrower 20 days notice of the sale, whether
or not the mortgage or deed of trust provides for such notice. The property
must be advertised for sale as follows:
-
In counties with over 50,000 inhabitants, the
notice foreclosure sale must be published at least twenty times in the daily
newspaper and continued to the day of sale.
- In counties with under 50,000 inhabitants, the notice
foreclosure must be published once per week on the same day each week in a
daily, tri-weekly, or semi-weekly newspaper for four successive issues, with
the last publication to be not more than one week prior to the foreclosure
sale.
An affidavit of the printer or publisher may serve as evidence
of publication.
Mailing of the Foreclosure Notice
The trustee who conducts the foreclosure sale must mail notice
of the foreclosure sale not less than 20 days prior to the scheduled date of
the sale to the following parties:
- The borrower named in the deed of trust or mortgage at the
last known address for the borrower.
- The person shown by the office of the recorder's deed of
records to be the owner of the property as of 40 days before the foreclosure
sale, to the last known address shown in the lender's records for such recorded
owner.
- Any person whose name and address is set forth in, request
for notice that has been duly recorded 40 days in advance of the foreclosure
sale date
The notice must be in the following format:
In accordance with R. S. MO 443.325, request is hereby made
that notice of sale under the deed of trust (or mortgage) recorded the ___ day
of ____ 19__, (as recorder's number ____ or in Book ___,.) of the records of
County, Missouri, the legal description of the property being __ in ____
County, Missouri, executed by ____ as Grantor (or Mortgagor) in
which______________ is named as beneficiary (or Mortgagee) and____________ as
Trustee, be mailed to ___ (Name) at _______________(Address) _____. (City)
_____, (State).
(Signature)
_______________________
_______________________ (Acknowledgment)
Receipt of Foreclosure: Notice Not Necessary
The borrower does not have to receive the envelope containing
the notice of foreclosure pursuant to a deed of trust or mortgage. Recording of
the receipt issued by the U.S. Post Office for certified or registered mail to
evidence that the envelope has been delivered by the sender to the U.S. Post
Office shall constitute proof of compliance with the notice requirements.
Trustees
The person named in the deed of trust or mortgage must conduct
the foreclosure sale. However, if the trustee is dead, neglects this duty or is
incapacitated, a new trustee can be appointed if the lender files a motion in
court requesting a new trustee, and the court feels the circumstances justify
an appointment, in which case the sheriff or another suitable person approved
by the Judge can conduct the sale. A foreign corporation may not be a trustee
for foreclosure in the state of Missouri, unless a co-trustee who is a resident
of Missouri is named. Certain nearby states can authorize a Missouri
corporation to act in a fiduciary capacity for an outside corporation. A
trustee may collect a 2 percent commission on the first $1,000,1 percent on
sums over that amount but under $5,000, and 0.5 percent on sums over that
amount.
Sale Procedures
The trustee must conduct the sale in a fair manner at the time
and place and in the manner specified in the notice of foreclosure, the deed of
trust and the statute. The property is to be called out for sale and sold to
the highest bidder. The lender may purchase at the sale, but if it does so, a
right of redemption applies.
Redemption
If any person other than the lender, or some. one purchasing on
behalf of the lender, buys the property at a fairly and properly conducted
foreclosure sale, then no right of redemption exists. If, on the other hand,
the lender buys at the foreclosure sale, as is so often the case, then the
borrower has a right to redeem the property for one year from the date of sale.
In order to obtain the right of redemption, however, the
borrower must meet many requirements. First, the borrower must give the trustee
or other person conducting the sale advance notice, ten days prior to the sale,
of the borrower's intent to redeem. Second, the borrower must arrange a bond on
which there is one good surety, besides the borrower, who can stand good for a
sum of money equal to the interest that would accrue throughout the year on the
mortgage, and on any prior lien loan, together with the foreclosure costs,
taxes and assessments, and furthermore, a sum equal to 6 percent of all the
sums bid by the successful bidder at the foreclosure sale, whether they were
advanced in cash or not. The bond must be sufficient to cover any waste or
damages inflicted on the property by the borrower. The bond must be in place 20
days after the sale, or else the borrower has no right to redeem.
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