●
Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
●
Non-Judicial Foreclosure Available: No
●
Primary Security Instruments: Mortgage
●
Timeline: Typically 150 days
●
Right of Redemption: Yes
●
Deficiency Judgments Allowed: Yes
In Indiana,
lenders may foreclose on a mortgage in
default by using the 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, the property will be auctioned
off to the highest bidder. However, there is
a wait time between the date the suit was
filed and the day the property is sold.
In Indiana,
the date the mortgage was signed determines
the length of time a lender must wait
between filing the suit and proceeding with
the foreclosure sale. The wait time is
anywhere from three (3) to twelve (12)
months, but the owner may file a waiver of
the time limit, which allows the sale to
proceed without delay. When this occurs, the
lender loses the right to pursue a
deficiency judgment.
The
foreclosure sale process involves publishing
an ad once a week for three weeks. The first
ad must be run 30 days before the sale. At
the time the first ad is run, each owner
must be served with notice of the
foreclosure sale by the sheriff. The sheriff
conveys title by a deed given immediately
after the sale. The owner may reside in the
property, rent free, until the foreclosure
sale, provided the owner is not committing
waste, which means tearing up the property.