| Maine 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!
Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Non-judicial Foreclosure Available: No
Maine offers several methods of
foreclosure. Most residential mortgage foreclosures are done by filing
a lawsuit in the District or Superior Court. On the other hand, a
foreclosure against a corporation may be done by a power of sale
procedure. Otherwise, Maine still maintains the common-law strict
foreclosure doctrine in which the lender owns the property and the
borrower loses any rights to the property by breaking a condition in the
mortgage, such as failing to make the loan payment. Although Maine is a
strict foreclosure state, it nevertheless permits a lawsuit to be filed
along the form of a bill in equity, which would ask the court to cut off
any further rights the borrower had to the property. This would be done
only in special cases. Generally, foreclosures in Maine are by strict
foreclosure, which, for convenience, can be divided into those
circumstances in which the lender seeks possession as part of the
foreclosure, and those situations where the lender does not seek
possession as part of the foreclosure.
Strict Foreclosure with Possession
In Maine, the lender may want to take
over the borrower's old property. After regaining title by legal means,
the lender could sell the property at a later date, without giving the
borrower the benefit of any excess the lender gets out of the sale over
and above what the borrower owed on the old loan. Alternatively, the
lender could simply keep the property and rent it out. In sum, strict
foreclosure allows the lender to become the owner, pure and simple. To
become the owner through strict foreclosure, however, the lender must
follow some specialized procedures. In particular, the lender must
obtain possession of the property and hold it throughout the redemption
period, which is one year on pre-1975 mortgages and three months on
post-1975 mortgages.
In Maine, there are three methods for
the lender to regain possession as part of the strict foreclosure
process:
- A lender can obtain a writ of
possession (which authorizes the sheriff to throw the borrower out)
from a court by filing a lawsuit that asks for the writ as part of a
conditional judgment.
- The lender can enter the property
and take possession if the borrower consented to it writing.
- The lender may enter the premises
peacefully, openly and without opposition, in the presence of two
witnesses.
Strict Foreclosure Without
Possession
In Maine, a lender can foreclose the
borrower's rights to the property without regaining possession at the
time of foreclosure by arranging to sell the borrower's property.
Initially, the lender files a lawsuit and wins a judgment that the
borrower owes the money; then the lender must wait until the end of the
redemption period, as described previously. At the end of the redemption
period, the lender will sell the property by a special procedure.
The procedure is to publish public
notice of the impending foreclosure for three successive weeks in a
newspaper of general circulation in the county where the land is
located. The notice should state that the lender is claiming the
property due to a breach of the mortgage conditions (such as nonpayment
of the loan) and give a description of the property, the date of the
mortgage and the nature of the breach. A copy of the printed notice and
the name and date of the newspaper in which it was last published must
be recorded within 30 days of the last publication of the notice.
Alternatively, an attested (sworn) copy of the printed notice may be
served on the borrower by the sheriff, and a copy of the notice and the
sheriff's return (indicating that it was served) may be recorded within
30 days after service.
The foreclosure sale must take place no
less than 30 days and no more than 45 days after the initial publication
of notice. The property must be sold at public sale to the highest
bidder, which may be the lender or anyone else. At the end of the sale,
the sales costs are deducted and the lender must disburse the remaining
money in accordance with the foreclosure judgment. Junior lien holders
should already have been joined when the foreclosure suit was first
filed, so they may get some part of the proceeds. Any surplus proceeds
from the sale must be paid to the borrower. The borrower may contest the
accounting within 30 days after the sale, but the high bidder at the
foreclosure sale will still retain title.
Deficiency
Any deficiency based on the foreclosure
sale is limited to the difference between the fair market value of the
property at the time of the foreclosure, as established by an appraisal,
and the amount of money the court found the lender was still owed on the
loan, as set forth in the court's final judgment.
Redemption
Maine offers the borrower a fairly
powerful right of redemption, which is the right to get the property
back after foreclosure by coming up with the loan money. There are two
redemption time periods:
- Pro-October 1, 1975, mortgages: one
year
- Post-October 1, 1975, mortgages:
three months
The time period begins once the lender
wins a judgment in the foreclosure lawsuit. The borrower may redeem the
property by paying off the loan. The Maine statutes cannot shorten the
one-year time period on pre-1975 mortgages be cause to do so would
violate the Maine State Constitution by impairing the existing
provisions of a contract.
Waiver
Maine has a waiver procedure that can
be deadly to the lender and helpful to the borrower. If the lender
accepts money or anything of value on the mortgage debt after the
foreclosure has begun and before the redemption time period has expired,
then the lender waives the foreclosure procedure. However, the lender
may receive income from the property after properly taking possession
without triggering a waiver.
Back to State
List
Call Toll Free
(800) 513-0602 |