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Both court and out-of-court foreclosures
occur in Arizona. The typical timeline for
an out-of-court foreclosure is about four
months.
Pre-foreclosure Period
Court foreclosures begin when the lender
files for foreclosure in court and records a
notice of the pending lawsuit (Lis Pendens).
The court filing includes the debt and
default amount. The borrower and any junior
lien holders are notified either in person
or by publication. If the borrower does not
respond to the court action, the court can
rule against them and set the amount owed to
the lender. The county clerk then directs
the county sheriff to conduct a sale of the
property to recover the amount owed. An
out-of-court foreclosure sale may occur if a
clause in the trust deed permits the lender
to sell the property if a borrower defaults.
To start the foreclosure, the trustee
records a notice of sale, and the sale
occurs at least three months after the
notice is recorded. Until 5:00 p.m. the day
before the sale, the borrower or any junior
lien holders may stop the foreclosure by
paying the default amount, fees, and costs.
Notice of Sale / Auction
For court foreclosures, the sheriff conducts
the sheriff's sale about 45 days after the
county clerk directs the sale. It is a
public auction, and anyone may bid. The bid
price must be paid to the sheriff by 5:00
p.m. the day after the sheriff's sale. After
the sale, a certificate of sale is issued.
If the property is not abandoned, the
redemption period is six months from the
sale date. If the borrower does not redeem,
any secondary lenders may do so within a
specified time. To redeem the property, the
total amount owed plus fees and costs must
be paid. If no one redeems the property, the
sheriff transfers ownership to the winning
bidder. For out-of-court trustee sales, the
notice of sale contains a property
description, and the date, time and place of
the sale. The notice is recorded, and the
trustee mails the notice to all affected
parties at least three months before the
sale date. The notice appears in a local
newspaper once a week for four weeks, with
the last notice published no less than 10
days before the sale date. At least 20 days
before the sale, the notice is posted on the
property and the county courthouse. Starting
the day before the sale and up to the sale,
the trustee must provide the opening bid of
the sale to anyone who asks or the sale may
have to be postponed. The trustee or the
trustee's agent conducts the sale at the
property, the courthouse, or the trustee's
office.All bidders must provide a refundable
$1,000 deposit in order to bid; the trustee
keeps the deposit of the winning bidder. The
sale can be postponed up to 90 days by
announcement at the originally scheduled
sale. The winning bidder has until 5:00 p.m.
the next day to pay the full bid price,
after which the trustee transfer ownership
of the property within seven days. The
proceeds of the sale are paid to the primary
lender, then to any secondary lenders. There
is no right of redemption for the borrower
after an out-of-court foreclosure sale. |