● Judicial
Foreclosure Available: Yes
● Non-Judicial
Foreclosure Available: Yes
● Primary
Security Instruments: Deed of Trust,
Mortgage
● Timeline:
Typically 90 days
● Right of
Redemption: None
● Deficiency
Judgments Allowed: Varies
In Arizona, lenders
may foreclose on deeds of trusts or
mortgages in default using either a judicial
or non-judicial foreclosure process.
Judicial
Foreclosure
The judicial process
of foreclosure, which involves filing a
lawsuit to obtain a court order to
foreclose, is used when no power of sale is
present in the mortgage or deed of trust.
Generally, after the court declares a
foreclosure, your home will be auctioned off
to the highest bidder.
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. 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. Otherwise, the non-judicial power
of sale foreclosure is carried out as
follows:
The trustee must
record a notice of sale in the office of the
recorder of the county where the property is
located. Within five (5) days after the
notice is recorded, the trustee must mail,
by certified mail, a copy of the notice of
sale to each of the people who are parties
to the trust deed, except for himself.
Additionally, the notice must appear in a
newspaper in the county where the property
is located once a week for four (4)
consecutive weeks, with the last notice
being published not less than ten (10) days
prior to the date of the sale.
Optionally, if it can
be done without a breach of the peace, the
trustee can post the notice at least twenty
(20) days prior to the date of the sale, in
some conspicuous place on the property to be
sold and/or he or she can post the notice at
the courthouse or at a specified place at
the place of business of the trustee in the
county in which the property is located.
The trustee or the
trustee’s agent must conduct the sale. The
sale is for cash to the highest bidder,
except that the lender can make a "credit
bid," which means to cancel out some part
(or all) of the money the borrower owed the
lender on the lean, instead of paying cash.
A successful high bidder must pay the bid
price by 5 pm of the day after the bid,
other than a Saturday or legal holiday.
Every bid is an irrevocable offer until the
sale is completed, which happens when the
bidder pays the bid price to the trustee’s
satisfaction. If the high bidder fails to
make the payment by 5:00 pm, the day after
being notified of the option to buy, then
the trustee may postpone the sale.
The trustee may
postpone the sale to another time, or
another place, by giving notice of the new
date, time and place by public declaration
at the last place and time the property was
offered for sale. No other notice is
required. A trustee may also, by written
agreement, extend the time for a buyer to
come up with the payment.
Once the sale is
complete, the proceeds will go to the
payment of the obligations secured by the
deed of trust that was foreclosed, then to
junior lien holders in order of their
priority. The successful bidder gets a
trustee’s deed, which provides conclusive
evidence that the trustee conducted the
foreclosure sale property.
A note regarding
Deficiency Suits: A lender may not bring a
deficiency suit against a person who lost a
property that is 2.5 acres or less at a
foreclosure, provided the property was a
single one-family or a single two-family
dwelling. This is so even if the high bid at
foreclosure was less that the balance due on
the loan. However, in foreclosures against
other types of property, a deficiency suit
is allowed, but is limited to the difference
between the balance owed and the fair market
value of the property, and then only if the
suit is brought within ninety (90) days of
the power of sale foreclosure.