North Carolina
When
you develop a definite plan of action with
well-timed, well-informed steps, you can stop
the foreclosure process and save your home. We
have outlined the foreclosure process for the
state of North Carolina.
The Process
North Carolina offers two methods of
foreclosure:
by filing a lawsuit seeking foreclosure
by conducting an out-of-court foreclosure sale
under the terms of a power of sale clause in a
deed of trust.
In the event the lender elects to foreclose by
filing a lawsuit, it will try to get a default
judgment. Once the lender gets a judgment, the
court clerks for the Superior Court have the
power of the judge to appoint commissioners to
make the foreclosure sale, receive the reports
on the sale and confirm the reported sale. They
may order the execution and delivery of a deed
to the property. The clerk may also issue a
writs of assistance to evict any occupants,
provided ten days' advance notice is given to
such occupants.
Deed of Trust Foreclosure
In North Carolina, a deed of trust foreclosure
has several unusual features. First, there must
be a preliminary hearing as to whether to
foreclose or not. Interested parties must
receive notice of the hearing. The clerk of the
court, not the judge, holds the hearing.
Afterward, a notice of the foreclosure sale must
be given; then the sale is conducted. A deposit
must be made at the sale. After the sale,
however, a very unusual procedure called an
upset bid exists. An upset bid consists of
making a higher bid than the foreclosure bid
within a set time, which will cause the property
to go through a resale, which may happen again
and again! After the final sale, the sale is
reported to the court clerk.
Preliminary Hearing
Under North Carolina law, a lender or trustee
who has the power of sale under a deed of trust
may foreclose it by following a statutorily
prescribed procedure. At the outset, a hearing
must be held before the court clerk (not the
judge) to determine whether the foreclosure
should take place or not. Notice of the hearing
must be served in the manner in which a lawsuit
is served, or by certified mail, return receipt
requested, or, if no other process to give
notice works after diligent effort, then the
notice of the hearing can be posted in a
conspicuous place on the property that will be
foreclosed on.
Notice of the Foreclosure Hearing
Notice of the hearing must be sent to the
borrower, anyone who owes money or could owe
money on the loan and every person who has a
recorded claim or lien on the real estate that
would be affected by the foreclosure.
The notice must describe the real estate, give
the name and address of the current lender,
describe the nature of the default, state
whether the loan has been accelerated and
mention any right the borrower has to pay to
cure the default.
The notice must state that the borrower has the
right to appear before the clerk of the court at
the date and time specified and show cause as to
why the foreclosure should not be held. The
notice must state that the borrower does not
have to appear, and that failure to attend does
not preclude the buyer from trying to cure the
default or buy at the foreclosure sale.
The notice should warn the borrower that the
foreclosure buyer will be entitled to possession
as soon as the foreclosure buyer accepts
delivery of the deed to the property. The
borrower is further advised to keep the lender
informed as to the borrower's latest address to
aid delivery of copies of any subsequent
foreclosure notices.
The right to receive a notice of hearing may be
waived, but only if the debt is over $100,000
and the waiver is in writing and signed in the
presence of the witness. When such written
waivers are delivered to the court clerk, the
clerk may skip the hearing on whether the
foreclosure should take place or not.
The Hearing
The clerk will hold the hearing. During the
hearing, the clerk will consider evidence as to
whether the debt exists, whether a default has
occurred and whether the lender has the right to
foreclose. If the clerk answers those questions
in the lender's favor, he or she will authorize
the foreclosure. Either side may appeal the
clerk's ruling to the judge within ten days.
(This is likely to be fruitless.)
Notice of Sale - Contents
The notice of sale shall describe the loan
instruments. It must identify the original
borrowers as they are shown in the deed records
within ten days prior to the posting of the
foreclosure notice. If someone other than the
borrower owns or claims ownership of the
property in an instrument that has been
recorded, then such a person must be mentioned
in the notice of the foreclosure sale.
The notice must give the date, hour and place of
the sale, provided such date, hour and place are
consistent with the state law regulating such
sales. (More details will follow on the sale
itself.) The notice must describe the property
and state the terms of the sale and that the
property will be sold subject to taxes, special
assessments and any other terms required by the
deed of trust, which must be specifically
described.
Notice of Sale - Posting and Publishing
The notice of the sale of the real estate must
be posted at the courthouse door for 20 days
prior to the sale. In addition it must be
published once a week for two successive weeks.
The two ads must be published at least eight
days apart. The last ad cannot be published less
than ten days before the sale. The notice of the
sale must be mailed first class mail at least 20
days before the sale to the borrower and any
other owner or record title or lien claimant at
the address last known to the trustee or the
lender. The notice must further be sent to
anyone who has taken the time and trouble to
record a request for copy of notice in the
statutory form as follows:
In accordance with the provisions of G. S..
45-21.17(5) request is hereby made that a copy
of any notice of sale under the deed of trust
(mortgage) recorded on
____________________19____, in Book____, page
______ records of ________________ County, North
Carolina, executed by
__________________________ as trustor
(mortgagor) in which _________________________
is named as beneficiary (mortgagee), and
____________________________ as trustee to be
mailed to ______________________ at the
following address __________________________.
Signature: __________________________
If the sale is made to someone other than the
lender, or if the lender resells to a good-faith
buyer and such a buyer holds the land six
months, then a person who did not receive a
notice of sale loses the right to challenge the
foreclosure. To challenge the sale, the party
must post a bond equal to what the lender is
owed on the loan against the property. The bond
is irrevocable, pending the final decision of
the court.
Time of Sale
A sale shall begin at the time designated in the
notice of sale, but never on a Sunday and always
between the hours of 10 a.m. and
4 p.m. The sale may be continued or postponed.
However, a postponement may only be for good
cause, such as bad weather, an excessive number
of competing sales, illness or another good
reason. The postponement must be announced at
the time and place the regular sale would have
taken place. A notice of the postponement must
be posted on the courthouse door, and be given
orally to each party who is normally entitled to
notice of a foreclosure sale. The notice has to
state the hour and date to which the sale is
postponed and the reason for the postponement
and it must be signed.
Place of Sale
The property must be sold at the courthouse door
in the county where the land is located, unless
the deed of trust provides for a different
location. If the deed of trust gives the trustee
the authority to designate a place of sale, then
the place of sale will be the place the trustee
designates on the notice of sale. The deed of
trust may require a cash deposit at the sale and
set the amount. If the required cash deposit is
not specified in the deed of trust, then the
trustee holding the sale may require the highest
bidder at the sale to pay a cash deposit not to
exceed 10 percent of the bid up to $1,000, and 5
percent of the amount by which the bid exceeds
$1,000. If the high bidder fails to make the
deposit at the sale, then the trustee may
immediately re-offer the property for sale to
any bidders.
Report
A preliminary report of the sale must be made to
the court within five days after the sale. The
report must give the name of the borrower; the
lender; the date, time and place of the sale;
recording information about the deed; the name
of the foreclosure buyer; the price at which the
property was sold and the name of the person
making the report.
Proceeds of the Sale
The foreclosure sale proceeds should be used to
pay off the costs of the sale, the taxes on the
property and any special assessments. Next, the
money goes to pay the balance due on the loan,
and then to creditors in order of their
seniority. Anything left over goes to the
borrower, or his or her estate. A special
proceeding is available to contest the
distribution of the sales proceeds.
Upset Bids
One of the most intriguing features of North
Carolina law is the upset bid on real estate
sold at foreclosure. Even after the sale, a
potential buyer can come in and make an upset
bid. An upset bid is an increased bid whereby a
bidder offers to buy the real estate previously
sold at foreclosure for an amount exceeding the
reported foreclosure sale price by 10 percent of
the first $1,000 and 5 percent of the amount
over $1,000 of the old foreclosure bid. Such a
sum of cash, or a cashier's check, must be
deposited with the clerk of the Superior Court,
within ten days after the clerk receives a
report on the old foreclosure sale. The clerk
may also require a bond in the amount of the
upset bid price, minus the cash deposit. The
clerk may then order a resale of the property.
Resale Under Upset Bids
When the clerk offers the property for resale
due to the deposit of an upset bid, then the
notice of the resale must be posted at the
courthouse door for 15 days prior to the sale. A
newspaper ad must be published once a week for
two successive weeks before the sale. Eight days
must separate the two ads. The last ad must be
run no less than seven days before sale. A
notice of the resale must be mailed to each
party. The sale will take place in the same
manner as the original sale. Once again, a high
bidder will emerge, who may well be the person
who put down the upset bid deposit. The entire
resale may be done again and again as often as
upset bids are submitted!
Final Report
A final report on the sale and the disposition
of the proceeds must be given to the clerk by
the person who held the foreclosure sale, within
30 days after receipt of the proceeds of the
sale. The final report should show what part or
parts of the property were sold. The clerk must
audit the report and record it. A copy of the
notice of sale or resale, and an affidavit of
publication should also be recorded. At this
point, the sale is final. Special procedures
exist to validate foreclosure sales well after
they took place when the proper procedures were
not complied with, or the trustee was also the
lender.
Injunctions
It is possible to enjoin a foreclosure sale in
North Carolina.
Deficiency
A lender may not sue for a deficiency if the
loan that went into default was for the purchase
price of the real estate. However, in other
cases a lender may sue for deficiency, but the
borrower has the right in a deficiency suit to
prove the reasonable value of the property as a
defense or offset to the lender's claims. The
borrower is not restricted to forcing the lender
to credit only the foreclosure bid against the
property; the borrower can instead assert and
prove the market value of the property as an
offset to a deficiency suit by the lender.
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