Use these North Dakota foreclosure procedures to avoid or
stop home foreclosure.
North Dakota Century Code Annotated, Vol 5A, Sections 28-24-01 et
seq.; Vol 6, Section 32-19-1,32-19-18; vol. 7, Sections 35-22-01 et seq.
In North Dakota, a lawsuit may be brought in District Court for
foreclosure or for satisfaction of a mortgage on real estate. Prior to bringing
any lawsuit, the lender must give the borrower no less than 30 days advance
notice of the lenders intent to foreclose. This notice must be sent no later
than 90 days before the suit is filed.
The notice must contain:
- a description of the real estate
- the date and amount of the mortgage
- the amount due for principal, interest and taxes paid by the
lender, stated separately
- a statement that if the amount due is not paid within 30 days
from the date of mailing or service, then a lawsuit will be filed to
foreclose
The notice must also state the time period for redemption,
which is either one year, or, for small tracts with substantial balances and
the properly worded mortgages, six months.
The notice must be served by registered or certified mail
addressed to the owner of record at the post office address shown on the
mortgage or recorded by the register of deeds. The notice may be served
personally in the same manner as a lawsuit. A U.S. Post Office registry return
receipt showing the envelope was delivered to the title owner is evidence the
owner received it. If the borrower brings in the missing payments any time
within 30 days after receipt of the notice, the loan must be reinstated.
North Dakota law requires the lawsuit paperwork to include
several allegations that are unusual. First, North Dakota law requires the
attorney bringing the suit to hold a power of attorney to act on behalf of the
lender. The lawsuit itself should allege this is so. Second, the lender must
also declare in the original lawsuit whether or not the lender will pursue a
deficiency judgment against the borrower if the foreclosure sale does not bring
in enough money to pay off the outstanding loan balance. The lender may not ask
for a deficiency in the foreclosure suit if it has already brought another suit
just to collect on the loan. If the borrower can bring in the missed payments
plus foreclosure costs before the decree of sale is issued by the court, then
the lender's lawsuit to foreclose must be dismissed.
All sales must be made by the sheriff or deputy of the county
where the judgment is rendered. The sale must take place in the county where
the land is located. The sale will normally be at the courthouse or another
place designated by the trust deed. Whenever the real estate is sold at
foreclosure, the sheriff or deputy must give the buyer a certificate of sale,
and at the expiration of the redemption time period, a deed must be given to
the buyer. The lender cannot obtain possession during the redemption
period. However, the lender can obtain a court injunction barring the
borrower from committing waste against the property during the redemption
period if the borrower continues to occupy the premises. Any cash surplus from
the sale, beyond that needed to pay off the mortgage and the foreclosure costs,
must be paid to the borrower.
Redemption
The normal redemption period is one year. One year from the
sale, if the borrower can come up with the balance due on the loan, plus costs,
the property can be redeemed. Property sold at foreclosure can be redeemed not
only by the borrower, but by a creditor who holds a lien against the property.
A creditor who wants to redeem is called a redemptionor. Interestingly, one
redemptionors can redeem from another redemptionor who took title by
redemption. Each redemptionor must wait 60 days after the last redemption. The
amount paid to redeem must be the amount of the original purchase price with
interest at the stated in the original loan documents or the one on which
foreclosure took place. In either case, the amount should elude the foreclosure
costs, plus taxes and insurance.
Short-Term Redemption
The short-term redemption time period is six months. In order
to claim short-term redemption, the mortgage must contain the following
wording:
"The parties agree that the provisions of the short-term
mortgage redemption act shall govern this mortgage."
The mortgage should also contain (in capital letters) the
words,
"MORTGAGESHORT-TERM MORTGAGE REDEMPTION"
The area covered must be ten acres or less. Short-term
redemption is available if the amount claimed upon the mortgage the date of the
notice before foreclosure is more than 66 2/3 percent of the original
indebtedness secured by the mortgage.
Moratorium
The North Dakota courts have the power to postpone I entry of
judgment in foreclosure proceedings if the balance owed on the loan is less
than the market value of the property. These provisions are applicable to
persons who would be deprived of a home.
Trustee for Commercial Property
Commercial property in North Dakota may be placed in the charge
of a trustee pending the expiration of the period of redemption. The trustee
can take possession of the premises; pay utilities, taxes and insurance;
receive rentals from tenants and evict them if they don't pay.
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