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Foreclosure Procedure
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Pennsylvania's judicial foreclosure is
not easy for lenders. All actions to foreclose, accelerate or take
possession are stayed until the borrower is sent an "Act 91" notice
giving the borrower 30 days to meet the lender or a consumer credit
agency listed on the notice.
Starting from the day of the first
meeting, the borrower has another 30 days delay to try and resolve the
problem by restructuring loan payments. Otherwise, the borrower can
apply for a Homeowner's Emergency Mortgage Assistance Program Loan and
gain an extra 60-day delay on foreclosure to process the application. If
the borrower has had good residential credit for the past 5 years, is 60
days delinquent and has a reasonable prospect of resuming loan payments
in full within 36 months, then the borrower should be approved. If the
loan is disapproved, or no meetings took place after the first 30 days,
the lender may foreclose.
Reimbursement
Under "Act 6," which applies to home
loans under $50,000, the borrower must be sent a 30-day notice of the
foreclosure, during which time attorney's fees are limited to $50. Also,
the borrower may pay the past due payments and stop the foreclosure up
to one hour before the bidding at the sheriff's sale and may do this up
to three times in a calendar year.
The Foreclosure Lawsuit
The foreclosure complaint (lawsuit)
must be filed and served on the borrower. It must describe the property
to be foreclosed on. It must state the names of the borrower and the
lender, the itemized amounts due, the fact that the mortgage is in
default and a demand for judgment. Although the lender may state more
than one reason to foreclose, the lender may not sue to collect the
money owed on the loan in addition to the suit to force the sale of the
property by foreclosure. The defendant may file a counterclaim against
the lender. The lawsuit however, must be tried before a judge, without a
jury. If the court orders foreclosure, then at least 30 days before
foreclosure the sheriff must give notice by putting a handbill on the
property, serving a copy on the borrower and advertising the property
for sale for three consecutive weeks. The sale takes place a month or
two after the court's order.
Redemption
There is no right of redemption after
the sale.
Deficiency
Pennsylvania passed the Pennsylvania
Deficiency Judgment Act. The lender may file a lawsuit to collect on the
promissory note signed by the borrower within six months of foreclosure.
This lawsuit must be separate from the foreclosure lawsuit. The borrower
has the right to force the lender to-credit the fair market value of the
property sold at the foreclosure sale against what is owed on the note.
The suit must be filed within six months after the foreclosure.
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