We bought a house/5 acres of land through foreclosure here in Michigan. I saw the notice on the front door, went up and read it. It listed the house and property for $22K+, what the owner, Frank, owed. It also had the name of the bank that held the mortgage.
I called my boss at work, as he used to work in the banking industry, and knew all about this kind of thing. He told me to call the bank, ask to speak to the loan officer, and tell them I was interested in Frank's property. I did. The woman was VERY helpful.
She said that banks don't want to own property, so they weren't thrilled about foreclosed property being on their books. All I had to do was offer $1 (one dollar) more than the amount shown, and I could buy it.
There was a date when the foreclosure sale was to be held, and where. It was the local county courthouse, and we had to show up that day. Here's the rub. You have to have the entire amount, cash in hand. Well, a bank check.
We went to the courthouse, and there was a Sheriff there, reading out the properties. A realtor was there, writing the addresses down, and hubby and me. The sheriff read the address of Frank's house, and I said, "We want to buy that one." (Ok, I was bouncing up and down, I was so excited.) We had arranged with the local bank to go get the check after the list was read, so we drove to the bank, got the check, came back, and did some paperwork.
My boss, the bank expert, said that the owner will have one year from the date of the sale to "redeem" the property. That means he has to pay us the amount, plus any interest we've paid on any loan, etc. After a year, we can do whatever we want with the property, and it's ours. But for that year, we can't do anything. Except pay the property taxes on it.
My boss said that he had never heard of a residential property being redeemed. Commercial property was different.
I called my boss at work, as he used to work in the banking industry, and knew all about this kind of thing. He told me to call the bank, ask to speak to the loan officer, and tell them I was interested in Frank's property. I did. The woman was VERY helpful.
She said that banks don't want to own property, so they weren't thrilled about foreclosed property being on their books. All I had to do was offer $1 (one dollar) more than the amount shown, and I could buy it.
There was a date when the foreclosure sale was to be held, and where. It was the local county courthouse, and we had to show up that day. Here's the rub. You have to have the entire amount, cash in hand. Well, a bank check.
We went to the courthouse, and there was a Sheriff there, reading out the properties. A realtor was there, writing the addresses down, and hubby and me. The sheriff read the address of Frank's house, and I said, "We want to buy that one." (Ok, I was bouncing up and down, I was so excited.) We had arranged with the local bank to go get the check after the list was read, so we drove to the bank, got the check, came back, and did some paperwork.
My boss, the bank expert, said that the owner will have one year from the date of the sale to "redeem" the property. That means he has to pay us the amount, plus any interest we've paid on any loan, etc. After a year, we can do whatever we want with the property, and it's ours. But for that year, we can't do anything. Except pay the property taxes on it.
My boss said that he had never heard of a residential property being redeemed. Commercial property was different.