| Iowa Foreclosure
Procedure
Back to State List
Use the following
foreclosure process to develop a definite plan of action with
well-timed, well-informed steps, so you can stop the foreclosure process
and save your home!
Iowa law places strong restraints on
foreclosures, particularly on loans for agricultural property. In Iowa,
many special notices must be given to borrowers advising them of their
rights. Lenders are not always permitted to foreclose at all. For
example, a court may declare a moratorium on foreclosures due to an
economic emergency. There are basically two ways to foreclose on
nonagricultural property in Iowa:
- the alternative non-judicial
voluntary foreclosure procedure, in which the borrower deeds the
property over to the lender and
- filing a lawsuit and obtaining
judicial foreclosure under equity law.
Alternative Non-judicial Voluntary
Foreclosure
If both the lender and the borrower
agree in writing, then a real estate mortgage can be foreclosed
voluntarily as follows:
The borrower conveys title of the
property to the lender.
The lender accepts title and waives any
rights to sue the borrower for any other claim, such as a deficiency.
The lender gets immediate access to
the property. The lender and borrower record a statement, signed by
both parties that they have elected voluntary foreclosure. The lender
sends by certified mail, notice of the voluntary foreclosure to all
junior lien holders, who have 30 days to exercise any rights of
redemption they may have. The borrower must sign a statutory
voluntary foreclosure form.
The form explains that by signing it
the borrower surrenders any statutory right to reclaim the property
within one year and the right to continue to occupy the property.
However, the form states the borrower cannot be sued for a deficiency if
the form is signed. It also advises the borrower to seek legal counsel
concerning all the competing) rights. The form also provides for its own
cancellation within five days.
If a borrower agrees to the voluntary
redemption procedure, the lender may not report the borrower to the
credit bureau as being delinquent on the loan, but the lender may state
that the voluntary foreclosure procedure was used.
Judicial Foreclosure
Other than the voluntary foreclosure
procedure described immediately above, the only way a lender can
foreclose a deed of trust or a mortgage on Iowa real estate is by a
lawsuit in court, governed by principles of equity law. The lender must
choose either to sue on the note or sue to foreclose the mortgage, but
not both. When a mortgage or deed of trust is foreclosed, the court will
render judgment for the entire amount due, and direct the sale of the
mortgaged property, or as much as is necessary. The lender may sue a
borrower for a foreclosure with or without redemption, but the latter
requires the borrower to sign a waiver.
Foreclosure with Redemption The
borrower retains a right to redeem the property after the sale, unless
the lender has chosen to sue for foreclosure without redemption.
Foreclosure without Redemption In the
event that a lender undertakes foreclosure without redemption, neither
the borrower nor junior lien holders have rights to redeem. However, if
the borrower bids an amount equal to the amount owed on the loan at the
foreclosure sale, then the borrower gets the property regardless of the
fact that junior lien holders might bid more at the sale. In foreclosure
without redemption, the first page of the lender's petition to foreclose
the mortgage must contain a notice, in capital letters of the same size
as the rest of the petition warning the borrower that the lender has
elected foreclosure without redemption. This means that the sale will
occur promptly unless a written demand is filed with the court to delay
the sale. If the demand is filed, the sale of a principal residence will
be delayed 12 months from the entry of judgment. (Sale is delayed two
months on other properties and six months on the residence if the
lender's lawsuit waives recovery of a deficiency.) However, if the
borrower files such a demand for delay, then the lender can sue the
borrower for a deficiency. If no demand for delay is filed, the lender
cannot sue for a deficiency. Either way, however, once the sale takes
place, the buyer at the foreclosure sale can take possession
immediately.
Right to Cure
In Iowa a borrower has a general right
to effect cure by making up missed payments prior to foreclosure. The
lender must send the borrower a notice of the borrower's rights to cure
as a prerequisite to foreclosure.
Before filing a lawsuit or taking any
action to foreclose on a borrower's one- or two-family home, any regular
lender, such as a bank, S&L or mortgage company, who believes in good
faith that a borrower is in default on a deed of trust or mortgage on a
homestead, must give the borrower a notice of the right-to-cure default.
Individuals who are lenders do not have to give the notice.
Mailing of Notice of Right to Cure
Regular lenders must give the notice by
direct delivery or by mail to the borrower's residence. The notice does
not have to be given in nonresidential situations.
Contents of Notice of Right to Cure
The notice must state
- the name, address and phone number
of the creditor to whom payment is to be made,
- a brief description of the
obligation secured by the mortgage or deed of trust,
- that the borrower has the right to
cure the default,
- the nature of the alleged default,
and the total payment, in an itemized form, of deferral charges (late
fees), the amount due and any other action needed to cure the default
and
- the exact date by which the amount
must be paid or an action must be performed.
Failure to Cure by Proper Times
If the borrower fails to perform in the
proper manner by the proper date, then the notice must also state that
the lender can initiate foreclosure. Once notice is given. the following
timetable applies:
30 Days
The borrower must be given no less than
30 days to cure the default by tendering (sending) either
- a sum equal to all the missed
payments due at the time of the tender, or
- the amount stated in the notice of
the right to cure, whichever is less, or by tendering any other
performance necessary to cure a default as described in the notice of
right to cure.
Such Extra Time as the Lender
Gives
A lender may give more than 30 days
without waiving or losing the right to commence foreclosure due to an
uncured default.
365 Days
A borrower has a right to cure the
default by bringing in the payments, unless the creditor has given the
borrower a notice of the right to cure once before within the past 365
days. Curing the default restores a borrower's rights under a mortgage
or a deed.
Special Protection Farm Foreclosure
Due to the bad luck Iowa's farmers have
sometimes experienced, the state legislature has passed many special
laws regulating farm foreclosures. Iowa's legal protections against
foreclosure of farmers are truly exceptional compared to any other
state. The procedures to foreclose on agricultural property in Iowa are
even more extensive. The lender must attempt mediation on land used as
an individual's farm, family farm, or a qualified farm corporation
through the Farm Mediation Service. A notice and initial meeting must be
held within 42 days of a request by the farmer. The farmer also has a
first right of refusal when agricultural property is sold at execution.
There are special deed in lieu procedures for agricultural properties.
In the special deed in lieu arrangement, the lender takes title, but the
farmer can lease the land back from the lender, and repurchase the land
within five years. The farmer may separately redeem the house and up to
40 acres from the rest of the land even after a foreclosure. Iowa's
farmers should beat a path to a lawyer's office before giving up any
effort to fight foreclosure. Iowa's procedures to protect against
foreclosure are extensive enough that if a farmer has the will to hold
on, there may often be a legal way to do so.
Regular Foreclosure
After fulfilling the vast number of
prerequisites required under Iowa law, as previously described, a lender
may obtain a judgment against the borrower for the full amount of the
balance due on the loan. The real estate may then be sold under a
general execution sale. Remember, the lender may not sue both for
foreclosure and to collect on the note. So if the lender sues on the
note, then, if and only if the sum found to be due is sufficient, the
real estate can be sold to pay off the judgment. The sales are proper
sheriff's sales. Once the property is sold, it may eliminate the loan
balance or reduce it. If some part of the loan balance is left unpaid,
the lender can still try to collect that part. Note that Iowa banned
deficiencies on agricultural foreclosures until July 1, 1991. Also, the
judgment is only good for two years and may not
Moratorium
If a borrower goes into default and is
sued by the lender, the borrower may file an answer admitting a default
in whole or in part, and then ask for a moratorium if the default was
due to such circumstances as a crop failure due to drought, flood, heat,
hail, storm or other climatic condition, or due to infestation of pests.
Under such circumstances, the court can extend the foreclosure date for
up to one full year. The court must appoint a receiver to take care of
the property in the meantime, and the original borrower is to be given
preference over other choices as receiver. The receiver may apply rents
and income in a statutorily defined order.
The governor of Iowa may declare a
state of economic emergency, applicable to various types of property,
such as agricultural property, or to be applied to all types of
property. The declaration makes such property eligible for a moratorium
continuance, which may last as long as one year. However, a lender can
apply to the court and show good faith efforts to restructure the debt,
and show the financial difficulties the lender is faced with if
foreclosure is not granted. The lender may also show that the borrower
has not paid interest on the loan. Upon weighing all these competing
considerations, a court may terminate the moratorium which would allow
the foreclosure to go forward. Only or continuance can be granted per
mortgage instrument under the governor's moratorium provisions.
Back to State
List
Call Toll Free
(800) 513-0602 |