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Alaska Foreclosure Law Summary

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Alaska Foreclosure Laws Subject To Change

The Alaska Foreclosure summary below provides information on your state’s most common foreclosure rules. However, you should also know that your state’s foreclosure laws and procedures are subject to legislative, judicial, and local rule changes.

The information below is intended to provide you with a starting point for understanding the intricacies and complexity of your state’s foreclosure law.

You will also need to consult with a local foreclosure defense lawyer to obtain a complete and current understanding of your state’s foreclosure laws and how they may apply to your specific legal and financial situation.

Quick Facts

– Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes

– Non-Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes

– Primary Security Instruments: Deed of Trust, Mortgage

– Timeline: Varies by Process; Typically 90 days

– Right of Redemption: Varies by Process

– Deficiency Judgments Allowed: Varies by Process

In Alaska, lenders may foreclose on deeds of trusts or mortgages in default using a judicial or non-judicial foreclosure process.

Changes In The Law: Foreclosure laws and state regulations are complex and subject to legislative change and evolving judicial interpretations. For additional information, contact a local foreclosure defense lawyer near you.

Judicial Foreclosure

The judicial process of foreclosure, which involves filing a lawsuit to obtain a court order to foreclose, has been instituted more since the late 1980s when lenders found that they were foreclosing on residential property worth substantially less than the amount owed. Generally, after the court declares a foreclosure, your home will be auctioned off to the highest bidder.

In judicial foreclosure, the process is carried out according to the rules of equity, deficiency suits are permitted, and the borrower has no rights of redemption.

Non-Judicial Foreclosure

The non-judicial foreclosure process 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 the property to pay off the balance on the loan in the event of 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, provided it meets the minimum protection laws set forth by the State of Alaska. Otherwise, the non-judicial power of sale foreclosure is carried out in the following three phases:

The trustee must record a notice of default in the recorder’s office in the recording district where the property is located not less than thirty (30) days after the bankruptcy and not less than three (3) months before the sale.

The notice of default must state the borrower’s name, the book, and the page where the deed is recorded. It must also describe the property, the borrower’s default, the amount the borrower owes, and the trustee’s desire to sell. The notice must also state the date, time, and place of the sale.

Within ten (10) days after recording the notice of default, the trustee must mail a copy of the same by certified mail to the last know address of (1) the borrower and (2) any person whose claim or lien on the property appears of record or is known to the lender of trustee and (3) any occupant. The trustee may have the notice delivered personally instead of sending it by certified mail.

Borrower Cures The Default

Any time before the sale, the borrower may cure the default and stop the sale by paying a sum equal to the missed payments plus attorney’s fees. The lender may not require the borrower to pay off the remaining principal balance of the loan to cure the default, just the missed payments and attorney’s fees. Suppose the lender has recorded a notice of default two or more times. In that case, the Alaska statutes provide that the lender can refuse to accept the borrower’s monies for the missed payments and attorney’s fees and proceed with the foreclosure sale instead.

Must Be A Public Auction

The sale must be made at a public auction held at the front door of a superior court courthouse in the judicial district where the property is located. The trustee must sell to the highest and best bidder, and the lender may bid at auction.

The trustee may postpone the sale of all or any portion of the property by delivering to the person conducting the deal a written and signed request for the postponement to a stated date and hour. The person conducting the sale shall publicly announce the delay to the stated date and hour at the time and place originally fixed for sale. This procedure shall be followed in any succeeding postponement.

Foreclosure Help:

You can do additional research or ask a lawyer for more information. Use the above information only as a starting point. You will need to consult with a local foreclosure lawyer for further information about your specific situation.

Contact A Verified Real Estate And Foreclosure Lawyer.

Sources and References:

Cornell Law Information Institute

HUD

Reference Source: U. S. Foreclosure

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