Quick
Information
- Judicial
Foreclosure Available: Yes
- Non-Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
- Primary Security Instruments: Deed of Trust, Mortgage
- Timeline: Varies by Process; Typically 60 days
- Right of Redemption: None
- Deficiency Judgments Allowed: Yes
In New Hampshire,
lenders
may foreclose on a mortgage or deed of trust in default by using either
the judicial or non-judicial foreclosure processes or any of the
following
special methods: Entry under Process, Entry and Publication or
Possession
and Publication.
Judicial
Foreclosure
In
New Hampshire,
the judicial process of foreclosure is very similar to that of the
strict
foreclosure process used in other New England states. The judicial
foreclosure
process is one in which the lender must file a complaint against the
borrower
and obtain a decree of sale from a court having jurisdiction in the
county
where the property is located before foreclosure proceedings can begin.
Generally, if the court finds the borrower in default, they will give
them
a set period of time to pay the delinquent amount, plus costs. If the
borrower
does not pay within the set period of time, the court will then order
the
property to be sold. Anyone may bid at the foreclosure sale, including
the lender.
Non-Judicial
Foreclosure
The
non-judicial
process of foreclosure is used when a power of sale clause exists in a
mortgage or deed of trust. A "power of sale" clause is the clause in a
deed of trust or mortgage, in which the borrower pre-authorizes the
sale
of property to pay off the balance on a loan in the event of the their
default. In deeds of trust or mortgages where a power of sale exists,
the
power given to the lender to sell the property may be executed by the
lender
or their representative, typically referred to as the trustee.
Regulations
for this type of foreclosure process are outlined below in the "Power
of
Sale Foreclosure Guidelines".
Power
of Sale Foreclosure Guidelines
If
the deed of trust or mortgage contains a power of sale clause and
specifies
the time, place and terms of sale, then the specified procedure must be
followed. Otherwise, the non-judicial power of sale foreclosure is
carried
out in the following phases:
1.
A notice of sale must
be
recorded in the county where the property is located and then: 1)
mailed
to the borrower at least twenty-five (25) days before the sale; and 2)
published once a week for three (3) weeks, with the first publication
appearing
not less than twenty (20) days before the sale, in a newspaper of
general
circulation in the county where the property is located.
2.
The notice should
contain
the time, date and place of sale, a description of the property and the
default, as well as a "warning" to the borrower, informing him the
property
is going to be sold and what rights he has to stop the procedure.
3.
The foreclosure sale
must
be held on the property itself, unless the power of sale clause
specifies
a different location.
Special
Methods of Foreclosure
- Entry under Process
- The lender may foreclose by entering the property under process
of law and maintaining actual possession of the property for one year.
- Entry and Publication
- By peaceable entry onto the property and continued, actual, peaceable
possession for a period of one year, and by a publishing a notice
stating the time of possession, the lender and borrowers name, the
date of the mortgage and a description of the property in a newspaper
of general circulation in the county where the property is located.
The notice must be published for three (3) successive weeks, with
the first publication appearing at least six (6) months before the
borrowers right to redeem has expired.
- Possession and
Publication
- By the lender in possession of the property publishing a notice
stating that from and after a certain day, the property will be held
for default of the mortgage and the borrowers rights to the property
will be foreclosed. Said notice must be published in a newspaper
printed
in the county where the property is located for three (3) successive
weeks and must give the borrower and lenders name, the date of the
mortgage, a description of the property and the lenders intention to
hold possession of the property for at least one (1) year.
Borrowers
have no
rights of redemption when any of the three (3) special methods of
foreclosure
are used.
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