| New Jersey Foreclosure
Procedure
Back to State List
Foreclosures in New Jersey take place
by filing a lawsuit. New Jersey doesn’t use privately conducted mortgage
foreclosure sales. A lender begins by filing a complaint of foreclosure
in the Superior Court. Constructive notice can be given by recording a
lis pendens with the clerk or register of the county where the land is
located. A lender may file a foreclosure suit simply to collect the
unpaid payments rather than the entire unpaid principal balance. If so,
the lender can get a judgment for the missed payments and yet hold the
mortgage and the note intact for the rest of the loan balance. The
property may be sold through a foreclosure sale with the mortgage lien
and note still in place so that the buyer at the foreclosure sale holds
title subject to the existing mortgage lien and note. In this type of
sale, however, the lender may not collect a deficiency judgment against
the borrower.
Preliminary Notices
In New Jersey once the lender wins a
judgment to foreclose on the real estate, whether in part, as just
described, or in whole, by a writ of execution, the sheriff or another
officer will conduct the sale. The foreclosure notice must be posted in
the county office of the county where the property is located, and on
the property in foreclosure. The notice must be advertised in two
newspapers in the county, one of which must be either the county seat or
the largest municipality in the county. The person seeking the
foreclosure must notify the property owner and any other parties to the
foreclosure lawsuit at least ten days before the sale. The newspaper ad
must disclose any title defects, unless the court has ordered the
foreclosure sale completed free of any liens. The buyer can back out of
the purchase the ad did not disclose the title defects, or if the sale
was not ordered to be free of liens. The buyer must by satisfying the
court that a defect in title exists.
Sale Procedures
The sheriff may then proceed to sell
the property in the manner directed by the court. The sheriff must
deliver the deed unless an objection to the sale is made within ten days
after the sale, or the objection is made before the deed was delivered,
if delivery is past ten days from the sale. Unless there are valid
objections, the court will confirm the sale. Thereafter the sheriff must
file a report of the sale with the court within a reasonable time.
Deficiency Judgments
Deficiency judgments are permitted in
New Jersey. A lawsuit for a deficiency must be commenced within three
months from the date of the foreclosure sale, or confirmation of the
sale if confirmation was required. Although the deficiency suit is a
separate lawsuit, it can only be brought against a person who was joined
to the foreclosure lawsuit and who is personally responsible for the
mortgage debt. Such a person must be served with the process. On a note
that is dated on or after May 1,1980, the debtor may dispute the
deficiency by introducing evidence of the fair market value of the
mortgaged premises at the time of the foreclosure sale. The deficiency
is limited to the difference between the fair market value of the
premises and the balance due on the loan. However, a borrower should
object to the foreclosure sale price prior to the confirmation of the
sale. The failure to do so may set the borrower up for a larger
deficiency. However, some New Jersey courts are refusing to confirm the
foreclosure sale unless the lender agrees, as part of the confirmation,
not to sue the borrower for a deficiency greater than the difference
between the fair market value and the balance owed on the loan.
Redemption
Redemption is possible during the ten
days a borrower has to object after a foreclosure sale. If the borrower
objected to the sale, then redemption is possible anytime until the
court rules on the objections, which may be longer than ten days.
If the lender sues the borrower for
deficiency, the effect is to reopen the foreclosure sale, which would
otherwise have been final and proof against a right of redemption. A
deficiency gives a borrower the right to bring an action to redeem the
property within six months after the lender’s deficiency judgment is
rendered. However, persons who answered the deficiency suit, disputing
its amount, and lost may not redeem.
Back to State
List
Call Toll Free
(800) 513-0602 |