Articles

Deficiency Liability after Foreclosure

by Valerie Marciano

Residential Owners can be Liable for a Deficiency

Following a Foreclosure or Trustee Sale

While the global economy is waiting for the recession to abate and real estate values to find their bottom, many Lenders are deciding whether, and to what extent, to look for deficiency payment from their borrowers after they foreclose on the borrowers' residential property. The term "anti-deficiency" has been tossed around in financial news for months as the recession has been endlessly reported on and even the non-financial community is becoming familiar with the term. Also, Lenders are realizing that the road to full or even partial recovery of their loans is rocky and uncertain, and not just because the borrowers do not have the money to repay the loans.

One of the rockiest of roads the Lender must navigate is the one that leads to the residence itself. Arizona's "anti-deficiency" statute operates to prohibit the Lender from recovering against the borrower's assets, such as bank accounts, after the Lender forecloses on the residence. Technically, when a residence is pledged as collateral for the loan and the residence is located on 2 ½ acres or less, Arizona's "anti-deficiency" law could apply. Essentially, if the Arizona's "anti-deficiency" law applies, the residence may be foreclosed on by the Lender. However, the borrower's other assets, again, the borrower's bank accounts, cannot be used to satisfy the debt, or in other words, the deficiency remaining between the foreclosure sale proceeds and the outstanding loan amount.

  1. The residence must be limited to a single or two family dwelling, and "utilized" for dwelling purposes.
  2. To be classified as a "dwelling", the property must be "wholly or partially occupied by persons lodging there at night or intended for such use."
  3. Property is not "utilized" as a dwelling when it is unfinished, has never been lived in, and is being held for sale to its first occupant by the owner who does not intend to live in the residence, or in other words, some of the newly constructed homes still owned by the developer.

If the residence is still under construction, or is not complete at the time of the trustee sale or foreclosure, it is likely that the Lender will be entitled to satisfy the debt and any resulting deficiency out of other assets of the borrower. However, if the residence is completed, and even if it is held for investment and used occasionally (see the description defined in the above paragraph) by the borrowers when it is not rented out to others, the Lender may be limited to the foreclosure of the residence and will not be able to look for other assets of the borrower such as bank accounts to satisfy the debt and any deficiency.

Prudent Lenders should begin evaluating the percentage of construction completion of the residence in deciding when to foreclose on the residence, if the Lenders expect to recover against other assets of the borrower. On the other hand, the borrower may find a way to complete the residence, move in (at least temporarily) or find tenants if the borrower then cannot pay the mortgage and allows the residence to be foreclosed. In such event the borrowers may avoid risking the borrower's other assets for repayment of the debt and any deficiency. For Lenders, it is essential that they monitor their loan collateral closely.


About the author:

Valerie Marciano is a partner at the Phoenix law firm of Jaburg Wilk. She practices in the areas of real estate litigation, creditor's rights, and bankruptcy litigation. Val has assisted various lenders with workouts of distressed real estate assets and foreclosures, and subsequent deficiency actions.

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