Maryland Foreclosure
Laws
Maryland Foreclosure Laws:
Quick Facts
-
Judicial
Foreclosure Available: Yes
- Non-Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes, with
restrictions
- Primary Security Instruments: Deed of Trust, Mortgage
- Timeline: Typically 90 days
- Right of Redemption: No
- Deficiency Judgments Allowed: Yes
Maryland Foreclosure Laws: Maryland,
lenders may foreclose on a mortgage or deed of trust in
default using either the judicial, assent to decree, or
non-judicial foreclosure process.
Maryland Foreclosure Laws:
Judicial
Foreclosure
In cases where
the security instrument contains neither a power of sale nor
an assent to a decree, a 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. The
court will then determine whether a default has occurred.
If the court
finds that a default has occurred it shall: 1) fix the
amount of the debt, interest, and costs then due; and 2)
provide a reasonable time within which payment may be made.
The court may order that if payment is not made within the
time fixed in the order, the property must be sold to
satisfy the debt.
Maryland Foreclosure Laws:
Assent To
Decree Foreclosure
Assent to a
decree foreclosure is used when a provision in the security
document declares an assent to the entry of an order for the
sale of the property upon a specified default. Lenders who
use the assent to decree foreclosure must file a complaint
to foreclose. However, it is not necessary for a hearing to
be held prior to the foreclosure sale.
Maryland Foreclosure Laws:
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.
Despite the
permission given in the power of sale clause, lenders in
Maryland must still file an order to docket before
foreclosure proceedings can begin. However, it is not
necessary for a hearing to be held prior to the foreclosure
sale.
Maryland Foreclosure Laws:
Foreclosure
Guidelines
Unless
otherwise stated in the original loan document or ordered by
the court, the following guidelines must be adhered to in
any foreclosure proceedings:
- A notice of sale must
be published in a newspaper of general circulation in
the county where the property resides at least once a
week for three (3) successive weeks, with the first
publication to be not less than fifteen (15) days prior
to sale and the last publication to be not more than one
week prior to sale. The notice of sale must also be sent
by certified and by registered mail, not more than
thirty (30) days and not less than ten (10) days before
the date of the sale, to the borrower at their last
known address.
- The sale must be
conducted by the person authorized to make the sale
(i.e. trustee, sheriff) and may take place immediately
outside the courthouse entrance, on the property itself
or the location advertised in the notice of sale, if
different. The terms of the sale vary by process.
- If the sale is
postponed, notice of the new date of sale shall be
published in the manner the original notice of sale was
given.
- Within thirty (30) days
after the sale, the person authorized to make the sale
must file a complete report of the sale with the court.
The clerk of the court will then issue a notice
containing a brief description to identify the property
and stating that the sale will be ratified unless cause
to the contrary is shown within 30 days after the date
of the notice. A copy of the notice shall be published
at least once a week in each of three successive weeks
before the expiration of the 30-day period in one or
more newspapers of general circulation in the county in
which the report of sale was filed.
- Lenders have a period
of three (3) years to file for a deficiency judgment,
but it is limited to the balance of the loan in default
after the foreclosure sale proceeds have been applied.
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