The Fine Print - August 2012 Issue
RELIEF TO
HOMEOWNERS FROM POTENTIAL DEFICIENCY CLAIMS
(AND SOME
PITFALLS!)
Question: I’m a homeowner facing
foreclosure, and understand the law has changed regarding my lender’s rights to
go after me for a deficiency claim. First, what the heck is a deficiency claim,
and second, how has the law changed, and does it benefit me?
Answer: The short answer is yes, Oregon law relating to a
lender’s right to bring a deficiency claim changed effective July 11, 2012.
The long answer starts with an explanation of
what a deficiency claim is and how the law worked prior to July 11, 2012, how
the new law changed the playing field, and then addresses a few unintended
consequences of the new law which can create a trap for the unwary.
What is a deficiency claim (or deficiency rights
of a lender)? In its simplest form, a deficiency claim is a claim by the lender
against the borrower for the deficiency. A deficiency is the difference between
what the lender recovers at a foreclosure sale, and what the lender is owed on
the loan. As an example, if the lender at the time of the foreclosure sale is
owed $200,000, but the property only sells for $150,000 at the foreclosure
sale, the deficiency is $50,000. This is the amount the lender is
"short" on getting paid back what it is owed.
Under prior and existing Oregon law a lender has
two ways to foreclose a trust deed - one is known as a nonjudicial foreclosure
(also known as a foreclosure by advertisement and sale), which does not involve
the courts, and the other is known as a judicial foreclosure, in which the
lender actually files a lawsuit against the borrower and seeks to obtain a
judgment of foreclosure, followed by a sheriff’s sale of the property. Under
prior and existing law, if the lender elected the remedy of a nonjudicial
foreclosure, and completed the sale, the lender could not preserve a deficiency
claim against the borrower - essentially the lender was stuck with what it
could get out of the property.
Under prior and existing law, however, if the
lender elected the remedy of a judicial foreclosure, if the trust deed being
foreclosed was not a "residential trust deed", then the lender would
have the right to obtain a judgment for the deficiency against the borrower -
under the example above, a judgment for $50,000, and try to collect this
deficiency judgment from other assets of the borrower.
So, the key is whether the trust deed is a
"residential trust deed", and this is where the new law comes into
play. Previously, a "residential trust deed" was defined as a trust
deed against a property which was occupied by the grantor (usually this is the
borrower, and I will use the term borrower to mean grantor), or the borrower’s
spouse or minor children, as the primary residence, at the time of the
commencement of a foreclosure action. In other words, whether a trust deed
was a "residential trust deed" was dependent upon whether it was
occupied as the primary residence when a foreclosure process started - whether
judicial or nonjudicial. It if was not, it was not a residential trust deed,
and if the lender elected to foreclose judicially, it could obtain a deficiency
judgment.
Under the new law (enacted through Senate Bill
1552), whether a trust deed is a " residential trust deed" is not
based upon whether the property was occupied as the primary residence at the
time of the start of the foreclosure process, but whether the property was
occupied as the primary residence at the time of the default under the loan
leading to the foreclosure sale (my language - the exact wording of the statute
is that a "residential trust deed" is one which is against a property
which the borrower (or identified spouse and dependents): "...occupies as
a principal residence at the time a default that results in an action to
foreclose the obligation secured by the trust deed first occurs.")
Let me give you a clear example of how the change
works. Assume that a borrower stops making the monthly payments on a loan
beginning August 1st (and the borrower is then occupying the
property as the primary residence), and makes no further payments on the loan,
and the lender starts a foreclosure action which is based upon the borrower
defaulting under the loan as of August 1st. While there are some
nuances which are beyond the scope of this column, under the new law, because
of the borrower’s occupancy as of August 1st, the lender would not
be able to seek a judgment for the deficiency.
What is the practical effect of this change?
Once the borrower defaults under the loan, as
long as the borrower (or the other identified parties), occupied the property
as the primary residence as of that date of default, the borrower could move
out of the property and still know that they had the certainty of not facing
potential liability for a deficiency claim. This could be important, for
example, if the borrower needed to move because of a change of job.
Under prior law, the borrower was essentially
tethered to the property until the foreclosure sale was completed, because the
lender always had the right to change the remedy (unfortunately, this was one
of little known elements of the foreclosure process generally not explained to
a borrower who did not have access to legal counsel). An example of this: if a
lender started a nonjudicial foreclosure on May 1, with a sale date set for
September 1, the borrower occupied the property as the primary residence on May
1, and the borrower later moved out of the property, for whatever reason, the
lender, up until September 1, could change its mind and stop the nonjudicial
foreclosure and start a judicial foreclosure. So, if this happened, and the
lender filed the judicial foreclosure complaint on August 15th, and
the borrower was no longer occupying the property as the primary residence, the
lender could now obtain a deficiency judgment. The new law stops this from
happening, by fixing the determination date based upon the date of default and
not the date of the start of the foreclosure process.
Under the new law, once the default occurs, the
borrower can move out of the property (whether because of a need to do so
(because of a job change, for example), or because of a desire to do so
(indeed, the borrower could move out of the property and convert it to a
rental, and still not face a deficiency claim).
What is the "TRAP" associated with
this change?
An example is the best way to illustrate the
potential trap to a borrower. Assume that a borrower has been renting a
property, defaults under the loan, and then, before a foreclosure action
starts, moves back into the property and occupies it as the primary residence.
Under the old law, because the property was occupied as the primary residence
at the time the foreclosure action started, the lender had no right to seek a
deficiency judgment.
Under the new law, this is not the case. Under
the example above, even if the borrower occupied the property as the primary
residence at the time the foreclosure action started, because the borrower did
not occupy the property that way at the time of the default under the loan, the
lender could still seek a deficiency judgment through a judicial foreclosure
(remember, if the lender elects to and goes all the way through the process of
a nonjudicial foreclosure, the lender will not have a deficiency claim, without
regard to the nature of the occupancy of the property). It would appear the
only way for a borrower to avoid this from happening would be to bring the loan
current, and then, after taking occupancy of the property as the primary
residence, defaulting again under the loan. This could prove to be quite a
burden to a borrower, but at the time, would appear to be the only way to avoid
facing the possibility of a deficiency claims for tens or hundreds of thousands
of dollars.
As a final side note, in the past, this change
may not have had much of an impact because almost all residential lenders would
elect the remedy of nonjudicial foreclosure, which precludes deficiency claims.
However, because of the MERS fiasco, and recent federal and Oregon appellate court rulings, many
residential lenders are opting to proceed with judicial foreclosures, because
they otherwise may not be able to obtain marketable title following a
nonjudicial foreclosure.
David R. Ambrose
CEO
Ambrose Law Group LLC
200 Buddha Building
312 NW10th Avenue
Portland , OR 97209
Direct Dial: 503.467.7237
Direct Fax: 503.467.7238
drambrose@ambroselaw.com
To ask one of our attorney's at Ambrose Law Group a Real
Estate question, please send us an email. Your question may be featured in our next newsletter!312 NW
Direct Dial: 503.467.7237
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drambrose@ambroselaw.com
Disclaimer: this column does not constitute the giving of legal advice, and your reading this column does not create an attorney/client relationship. You are encouraged to consult a lawyer or accountant should you have questions about how this information may be applicable to your particular situation.

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