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Insult To Injury: Deficiency
Judgements
By:
ROGER H. MILLER
August, 2009
With the unprecedented number of
foreclosures, many people are concerned not just with losing their home or investment property, but
also the potential for the lender to obtain a money judgment against them personally. This
concern is legitimate, because most properties in foreclosure right now are not worth what is owed
to the lender. As a result, even if the lender forecloses and the lender either recovers the
collateral, or a third-party purchases the collateral at a foreclosure sale for less than is owed
to the lender, the lender has the right to pursue a deficiency judgment.
A deficiency judgment is a money judgment
against the borrowers that may be entered after the collateral has been sold. The amount of
the money judgment is the difference between the foreclosure judgment amount and the greater of
what the collateral is worth or what it sold for at the foreclosure sale. In the vast
majority of foreclosures filed during this current real estate downturn, the foreclosing lender
ends up purchasing the collateral at the foreclosure sale. Oftentimes, there are no other
bidders at the foreclosure sale and the foreclosing lender purchases the property for $100.
That does not necessarily mean that a third party could have purchased the property by bidding more
than $100, because the lender could have continued to bid up to its judgment amount.
If the foreclosing lender purchases the
collateral at the foreclosure sale and the property is worth less than the lender’s judgment, the
lender can pursue a deficiency judgment against the borrowers. The borrowers would be
determined by who signed the promissory note(s), not necessarily who signed the mortgage.
Frequently, less than all the owners of property borrow the funds; however, all of the property
owners must sign the mortgage so as to create a lien on the real property to secure the sums
borrowed. The parties who did not sign the promissory note but signed the mortgage, are not
personally responsible to pay the loan back, but they have pledged the property as collateral by
signing the mortgage. Therefore, if the borrower does not pay pursuant to the promissory
note, the lender can foreclose the mortgage and force the sale of the property.
If the collateral, as of the day of the sale, is
worth less than the judgment obtained by the lender, then the lender can file a motion and seek a
deficiency judgment. The value of the property can be determined by testimony from an
appraiser, Realtor or owner, as well as the amount the property sold for at the foreclosure.
The value of the property is a factual issue and the parties may dispute the value of the
property. If the value is disputed, the court will hold an evidentiary hearing and make a
determination as to the value of the property based on the evidence presented at the hearing.
Once the court has determined the value of the property, the court can enter a deficiency judgment
in the amount of the difference between the final judgment in foreclosure and the value of the
property.
As you can see, a party in foreclosure has more to
worry about than simply losing the property, which is why anyone facing a foreclosure lawsuit
should contact an attorney knowledgeable in foreclosures.
courtesy of Farr Law Firm www.farr.com
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