| Vermont Foreclosure
Procedure
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Vermont allows foreclosure either by
filing a lawsuit to obtain strict foreclosure, in which the
title given tot he lender by deed will
be ruled to be final, or by filing a lawsuit to foreclosure under a
power of sale clause in a deed of trust. Both procedures are governed by
the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure. There is a statute for deed of
trust foreclosure (VT. Stat. Ann tit 12 §4531a). Under Vermont’s strict
foreclosure procedures, the lender gets a deed to the property at the
outset of the loan, but the deed also provides that the borrower can get
the title back by repaying the loan. All the lender has to do is get a
court declaration that the borrower has failed to meet the condition,
and the title becomes final in the name of the lender after a statutory
redemption period passes, during which the borrower can recover the
property by paying off the rest of the loan.
In strict foreclosure a complaint
(lawsuit) must be filed in county court. The complaint and a summons to
the borrows to appear and answer the complaint must be served on the
borrower. The complaint must state the borrower's am lender's names, the
date of the mortgage deed, a description of the debt owed and a claim
for attorney's fees, if any are sought. It must state that the reason
the lender is foreclosing, is a breach in the deed's conditions.
Although the lawsuit prays for the court to foreclose the borrower's
right to redeem the property, the borrower nevertheless has a right to
re deem under Vermont's statutes. Under Vermont statutes the time for
redemption is one year for pre-1968 mortgage and six months for
post-1968 mortgages, from the date of the judgment. However, the lender
can request a shorter time for good cause. Once the complaint is served,
the lender may move for summary judgment in order to avoid trial.
Non-judicial Foreclosure
Due to Vermont's long tradition of
strict foreclosure, a foreclosure sale under a power of sale clause has
only recently become common in residential loans, although they have
been common in commercial transactions. Vermont does not have a
well-established tradition of foreclosure auctions. In Vermont, a lender
must still bring a lawsuit to foreclose a deed of trust and obtain an
order for a sale. However, the foreclosure may not take place until
seven months have passed from the date the lawsuit was served on the
borrower, unless the borrower and lender agree otherwise, or the
borrower is damaging the property.
Deficiency
In Vermont a lender may sue the
borrower to collect deficiency if the foreclosure sale under the deed of
trust was not sufficient to repay the loan plus the foreclosure
expenses. However, if the lender buys at the foreclosure sale, the
borrower can force the lender to credit the fair market value of the
property against the total amount owed, which includes the loan balance
and the foreclosure expenses. If the foreclosure sale generates a
surplus, junior lien holders and creditors may claim it up to the amount
owed in the order of their priority.
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