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If an Association has a
lien on a unit for unpaid assessments, should the
Association foreclose the lien by advertisement, or
should it foreclose the lien through the judicial
foreclosure process?
I. OVERVIEW
– WHAT ARE THE ASSOCIATION’S GOALS?
Our clients often ask us
which method is preferable for foreclosing a lien on a
unit for unpaid assessments and related amounts owed to
the Association by a delinquent co-owner. The answer is
that in almost all cases it will be preferable to
foreclose a lien by judicial action rather than by
advertisement.
The Association’s primary
goals in any collection action will be:
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To collect all
assessments owed, as well as any late charges or
other charges validly assessed to the co-owner's
account (such as fines, additional assessments,
etc.)
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To collect all legal
fees and costs incurred by the Association in the
collection action pursuant to the Michigan
Condominium Act and the Condominium Bylaws.
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f the co-owner still
refuses or is unable to pay the debt after
collection action has been taken, then to obtain
marketable title to the delinquent co-owner's unit
via a foreclosure sale. The Association can then
recoup its expenses by selling the unit to a new
owner.
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To accomplish the above
three goals in the fastest and most efficient manner
possible, while exposing the Association to the
least amount of risk,
As will be explained below,
judicial foreclosure is nearly always superior to
foreclosure by advertisement for every one of these
goals.
II. THE
TWO METHODS OF FORECLOSURE – A BRIEF OVERVIEW
Under the Act, sums assessed
to a co-owner by the association that are unpaid,
together with interest, collection costs, late charges,
advances made by the association of co-owners for taxes
or other liens to protect its lien, fines and attorney
fees, constitute a lien upon the unit or units in the
project owned by the co-owner at the time of the
assessment. The Association’s lien has priority over
all other liens on the unit except (1) tax liens on the
unit in favor of any state or federal taxing authority,
and (2) sums unpaid on any first mortgage of record,
provided that the mortgage was recorded before the
Association’s lien.
The Act provides that an
Association may foreclose a lien for unpaid assessments
and other amounts due by the same methods as permitted
for mortgage foreclosures in the State of Michigan.
These methods are judicial foreclosure and foreclosure
by advertisement.
1.
Judicial Foreclosure.
In a judicial foreclosure,
the Association begins the foreclosure process by filing
a lawsuit with the Circuit Court in the county in which
the Condominium is located. The Association serves the
co-owner with a summons and complaint to begin the
lawsuit. If the co-owner fails to file a written answer
to the complaint with the Court within 21 days of being
served, the Association can file a motion with the Court
asking it to enter a Default Judgment of Foreclosure
against the co-owner. This Judgment will set forth all
of the amounts owed by the co-owner, including (in most
cases) an award of all of the Association’s legal fees
and costs. The Judgment concludes the lawsuit.
The Association then
initiates the sale process by publishing a public notice
of the upcoming foreclosure sale in the relevant
county’s legal newspaper for 5 weeks. This notice is
also posted at the county courthouse and at the unit.
The sale is held at the county courthouse. The
Association takes title to the unit on the sale date for
the amount of the debt unless a third party bids higher
than that amount at the sale (at which point the
Association is paid off completely). The co-owner by
law has six months to redeem the unit out of foreclosure
by paying the Association the total amount owed. If the
co-owner fails to do so, the Association can file suit
in District Court to evict the co-owner at the end of
the redemption period. Once the co-owner is evicted,
the Association can sell the unit to a new owner and
re-coup its expenses at the sale.
2.
Foreclosure by Advertisement
In a foreclosure by
advertisement, the Association does not file a lawsuit
against the co-owner. Instead, the Association skips
the lawsuit stage and simply starts the foreclosure
process by publishing a foreclosure notice for 4
successive weeks in a local newspaper, and a true copy
is also posted in a conspicuous place at the unit. If
the co-owner fails to pay the debt, the Association
takes title to the unit at the foreclosure sale in the
same manner as described above.
III. REASONS
WHY THE JUDICIAL APPROACH IS PREFERABLE
Although foreclosure by advertisement may at first
glance appear to be the quicker and more efficient
foreclosure method, there are several reasons why
judicial foreclosure is the more prudent approach.
These reasons are as follows:
1.
Marketable Title: One of the biggest
reasons why judicial foreclosure is preferable is that
even if a foreclosure by advertisement is successful in
obtaining legal title to the unit in the name of the
Association, virtually no title insurance company will
provide title insurance on the unit to the Association.
The Association cannot re-sell a unit that it has
foreclosed upon without first obtaining title insurance
for the new purchaser. If the Association cannot obtain
a viable title insurance policy for the unit, it has no
way to convey marketable title to the unit to a
prospective purchaser. For this reason, even though it
is legally possible to foreclose a lien by
advertisement, from a pragmatic perspective it will be
nearly impossible to complete the foreclosure and
re-sale process in the “real world” using the
advertisement method.
By comparison, judicial
foreclosures are not subject to this drawback. In a
judicial foreclosure, a judgment of foreclosure is
entered with the Court, which declares that the
Association has foreclosed the co-owner’s interest in
the unit and may legally obtain title to that unit
through a judicial sale, subject only to the co-owner’s
legal right to redeem during the statutory six-month
period of redemption. The Association can record a copy
of the Clerk’s Deed to the unit given at the Judicial
Sale as a routine part of the court proceedings with the
county’s Register of Deeds to evidence its title to the
unit. This is usually sufficient to satisfy any title
company’s concerns about the Association’s title to the
unit. The judicial determination gives the title
insurer confidence that the title is fully vested in the
Association and that the unit will not be subject to
some type of future litigation by the disgruntled former
co-owner of the unit.
2.
Money Judgment: Another reason why
judicial foreclosures are preferable to foreclosures by
advertisement is that the judicial foreclosure method
also allows the Association to obtain a money judgment
against the delinquent co-owner as a routine part of the
court proceedings. If the co-owner’s mortgage company
forecloses its mortgage on the co-owner’s unit (thereby
preventing the Association from doing the same with its
lien), the Association will still have a money judgment
that it may enforce personally against the former
co-owner. These judgments are enforceable for a ten
year period.
By comparison, if the
Association begins to foreclose on a unit by
advertisement and the co-owner’s mortgage company
afterward begins to foreclose its mortgage, the mortgage
company’s foreclosure renders the Association’s
foreclosure null and void, since first mortgage lenders
usually have priority over Association liens in nearly
every case under the Condominium Act (as long as the
first mortgage was recorded before the Association’s
lien). In cases where a foreclosure by advertisement by
the Association has already begun, the money wasted by
the Association on that foreclosure would have been
better spent in a judicial foreclosure whereby the
Association could have obtained a money judgment that it
could enforce against the former co-owner’s assets and
bank accounts. In short, a judicial foreclosure allows
the Association to proceed with a sale once it obtains a
Judgment, with the added benefit of having a money
judgment against the co-owner should the first mortgage
holder also decide to foreclose.
3.
Proven Effectiveness: The Board of
Directors should remember that the goal of any
collection action is actually not to obtain title to the
unit, but to recover the amounts owed to the
Association. When a co-owner is personally served with
a summons and complaint in a foreclosure lawsuit, the
realities of being served with a lawsuit can often
suddenly “convince” a reluctant co-owner to pay what is
owed. In the vast majority of our hundreds (and
hundreds) of cases handled each year, our firm’s
experience has been that a foreclosure lawsuit is quite
effective in forcing co-owners to pay their obligations
to the Association.
The judicial foreclosure
process is a much more direct method for communicating
the Association’s intentions clearly to the co-owner
that the Association is serious about collecting the
debt and that it will utilize any and all legal methods
available to either obtain payment of the debt or else
take title to the co-owner’s unit. The co-owner
receives multiple pleadings, motions and documents
during the lawsuit that “encourage” the co-owner to try
to reach a resolution with the Association as soon as
possible. The co-owner also quickly realizes that
failure to resolve the debt not only leads to
foreclosure of the unit, but also to greatly increased
amounts owed to the Association due to the collection
costs involved in a foreclosure lawsuit. Foreclosure by
advertisement does very little to communicate the
seriousness of the Association’s intentions to collect
unpaid amounts because it involves very little direct
communication with the co-owner.
4.
No Surprised Debtors: There is little
chance that a foreclosure will take the delinquent
co-owner by surprise if the Association has filed
suit to initiate the foreclosure. Whenever possible,
the co-owner is personally served with the lawsuit
documents (in some cases, alternate service is permitted
by court order if the co-owner is evading personal
service, but even then the co-owner is well aware of the
seriousness of the situation if he/she is purposely
avoiding a process server). Also, the co-owner receives
a copy of each and every document that the Association
files with the Court as the lawsuit progresses. In a
foreclosure by advertisement, the co-owner almost
certainly will not see the foreclosure notice that is
posted at the courthouse or in the local newspaper. The
sole notice the co-owner receives is the one posted at
the unit. Many co-owners may not even understand the
meaning of the notice. Many will deny ever receiving the
notice. It is easy to imagine that a delinquent co-owner
could be shocked to find that the Association is about
to evict him for unpaid assessments if the Association
has used foreclosure by advertisement. In such cases,
the Association faces the risk of a lawsuit by the
co-owner challenging the foreclosure/eviction process,
and the Association could end up litigating the matter
even though the foreclosure by advertisement has been
conducted properly, or if the co-owner belatedly
challenges the charges assessed to the unit.
5. Junior
Lienholders:
In a judicial foreclosure,
the Association will name as defendants to the lawsuit
any party that has an interest in the unit, including
not only first mortgagees, but also any second and
subsequent mortgagees. As stated above, only the first
mortgagee has priority over the Association’s lien (and
only if that mortgage was recorded before the
Association’s lien). Any second or subsequent
mortgagees are subordinate to the Association’s lien.
This means that these mortgagees will have to pay off
the Association’s lien if they want to preserve their
own mortgages, since these mortgagees would be “wiped
out” if the Association’s lien is foreclosed (i.e., the
Association’s title to the unit would not be subject to
any of these mortgages after the foreclosure). By
giving notice of its foreclosure to subsequent
mortgagees, the Association can increase the chance that
it will receive payment in full via the lawsuit, since
the subsequent mortgagees might pay off what the
co-owner owes to the Association once they find out
about the foreclosure. The subsequent mortgagees then
pursue the co-owner directly for recovery of these
amounts, usually by tacking them on to the co-owner’s
mortgage debt.
6. Finality:
In almost all
cases, the co-owner has no legal defense to the lawsuit,
so the Association can expect in each case to obtain a
Foreclosure Judgment against the co-owner (or else force
the co-owner into an acceptable payment arrangement,
which can be formalized via the entry of a Court
Order). Once the Judgment is entered with the Court for
the amount of unpaid assessments, late charges, legal
fees and costs, and the 21 day period for appeals has
expired, the co-owner’s liability is firmly established
and can no longer be called into question by the
co-owner. From that point forward, the only open issue
is whether the co-owner can pay what is owed (or propose
an acceptable payment arrangement) to avoid a
foreclosure sale and eviction.
By contrast, even after a
foreclosure by advertisement is concluded, the
Association has no assurance that the question of the
co-owner’s liability for the debt and any related issues
will not arise again in a future lawsuit by the co-owner
challenging the foreclosure.
IV.
JUDICIAL FORECLOSURES
BEST MEET THE ASSOCIATION’S GOALS IN COLLECTING
ASSESSMENTS
In sum, judicial foreclosure
is the least risky and most cost-effective method by
which an Association can recover unpaid assessments and
other amounts secured by its lien on a delinquent
co-owner’s unit. Judicial foreclosure allows the
Association to reach a court resolution of the debt that
is not subject to future challenges, and it ensures that
the Association will be able to convey marketable title
to a new purchaser if the foreclosure goes through and
the Association needs to re-sell the unit. For all of
these reasons, judicial foreclosure is a vastly superior
method than foreclosure by advertisement
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