| Kansas Foreclosure
Procedure
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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!
Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Non-judicial Foreclosure Available: No
Preliminary Notices
Advertising Notice of the time and
place of sale must be advertised once a week for three consecutive
weeks, with the last publication no more than 14 and no less than 7 days
before the foreclosure day.
Mailing
Notice must be sent to the defaulting
borrower within five days of the first ad.
Sale Procedures
Place
The sale must be at the courthouse,
although the district judge may order the sale on the premises or at
another location.
Manner
The sale is by public auction to the
highest bidder. The sheriff will at once give the buyer at the
foreclosure sale a certificate of purchase. The certificate of purchase
is all the buyer gets until the borrower's redemption rights expire.
Confirmation
The foreclosure sale must be confirmed
by the court after the sale. The court has discretion to refuse to honor
the sale and require a minimum bid or force the crediting of the market
value against what was owed on the loan. Once confirmed, a sheriff's
deed can be issued and it will vest good and perfect title in the
foreclosure buyer. However, the court may specify as a condition of
confirmation that the redemption period may run first, which is 12
months unless reduced.
Special Procedures
A judgment can stay un-enforced up to
five years, at which point it becomes dormant, but is subject to revival
for another two years. Afterward the judgment is barred from enforcement
and the court records must reflect that fact.
Deficiency
A deficiency judgment may be obtained
for the difference between the foreclosure sale price and the amount due
on the loan. Deficiencies are common. However, the court may refuse to
confirm a sale where the price is not equal to the judgment, which helps
prevent abusive deficiency judgments.
Redemption
The borrower can redeem any real
property sold at foreclosure at any time up to 12 months from the date
of sale by paying the holder of the certificate of purchase the purchase
price plus costs and interest. If the judge finds the property is
abandoned or not occupied in good faith, then the redemption period is
six months. Lien creditors must undertake redemption within three
months. The former borrower's redemption period may be reduced if the
lien is only one-third of the original indebtedness. The on year goes
down to six months. However, the court may conduct a hearing on market
value, and if the debt is one third of the court-perceived market value,
then 12 month for redemption may be allowed before the court will
confirm the sale.
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