What is Foreclosure?
Foreclosure
is to shut out, to bar, to extinguish a mortgagor's right of redeeming
a mortgaged estate. It is a termination of all rights of the homeowner
covered by a mortgage.
Foreclosure is a process in which the estate becomes the absolute property of the lending institution.
Foreclosure numbers are growing daily. Of the
one hundred twenty or so million homes in America, more than 4% or
roughly 4.8 million of them are facing foreclosure. Some of these homeowners are able to work their way out of foreclosure, however, according to MBA there were about 500,000 homes that went through foreclosure last year. Foreclosure threatens these homeowners because they are late or seriously behind on their mortgage payments.
The Foreclosure process begins when the
homeowner fails to make payments of the money due on the mortgage at
the appointed time. This may be due to several reasons. Unemployment,
divorce, medical challenges, terms of the loan, sick of property
management, and even death.
Foreclosure is applied to any method of
enforcing payment of the debt secured by a mortgage, by taking and
selling the estate. Borrowers and lenders now face a challenging
situation. Both seek a compromise that permits a win-win outcome. The
borrower to keep his home or business, the lender to keep receiving
mortgage payments.
Foreclosure proceedings typically start with a
formal demand for payment which is usually a letter issued from the
lender. This letter of notice is referred to as a Notice of Default (NOD).
Depending on your state, the lender will issue this notice when the
homeowner has been 3 months delinquent on the mortgage payments. Keep
in mind that the notice is a threat to sell your property, terminate
all your rights in that property and evict you from the premises.