The California Foreclosure Process
Explained
Finally, a Notice of Sale must be posted in
at least 1 public place in the county where the property is to
be sold, such as a local newspaper’s real estate section.
A California foreclosure notice of sale must
contain the time and location of the foreclosure sale, the
property address, the trustee's name, address and phone number,
and a statement that the property will be sold at auction.
The borrower in a California foreclosure
process has up until five (5) days before the foreclosure sale
takes place to pay (or cure) the debt and stop the process.
After the 5th day before the sale, there is no way to stop
it.
Further, the sale must be held on a business
day (no bank holidays) between the hours of 9:00am and 5:00pm
and must take place at the location specified in the Notice of
Sale. (If they get this stuff wrong, they will have to do it
over another day!)
At the auction, the state trustee may
require proof of the bidder’s ability to pay their full bid
amount before the auction begins. Anyone present may bid at
this public auction, and of course the highest bidder wins the
property.
If no bidders show up, the sale may be
postponed by a simple announcement.
What if the borrower was upside-down at the
time of closing?
California law states that lenders may NOT
seek a deficiency judgment after a non-judicial foreclosure
sale, so the lender is at risk for loss. However, after the
sale the borrower has no rights of redemption, either.
So basically, the California real estate
foreclosure process takes at least four months from the time of
the first missed payment, but is usually stretched out longer
due to paperwork delays and lender’s inability to keep up with
their workload.
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