96-23258. Office of the Secretary; Multifamily and Single Family Nonjudicial Foreclosure Procedures Streamlining  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 179 (Friday, September 13, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 48546-48562]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-23258]
    
    
    
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    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part III
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Housing and Urban Development
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    24 CFR Parts 27 and 29
    
    
    
    Streamlining Multifamily and Single Family Nonjudicial Foreclosure 
    Procedures; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 61, No. 179 / Friday, September 13, 1996 / 
    Rules and Regulations
    
    [[Page 48546]]
    
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
    
    24 CFR Parts 27 and 29
    
    [Docket No. FR-4110-F-01]
    RIN 2501-AC29
    
    
    Office of the Secretary; Multifamily and Single Family 
    Nonjudicial Foreclosure Procedures Streamlining
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, HUD.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This final rule is a part of HUD's regulatory reinvention 
    initiative. It combines the current rules for multifamily and single 
    family nonjudicial foreclosure at 24 CFR parts 27 and 29, respectively, 
    into separate subparts of part 27, thereby eliminating a CFR part. In 
    addition, this rule streamlines the multifamily requirements in the 
    current part 27, which repeats substantial portions of the authorizing 
    statute, and removes certain single family requirements in the current 
    part 29 that are more restrictive than the authorizing statute.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: October 15, 1996.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: With respect to Single Family Housing: 
    Bruce S. Albright, Office of General Counsel, U.S. Department of 
    Housing and Urban Development, Room 9240, Washington, DC 20410, (202) 
    708-0080. A telecommunications device for the hearing impaired (TTY) is 
    available at (202) 708-3259. (These are not toll-free numbers.)
        With respect to Multifamily Housing: Herbert Goldblatt, Office of 
    General Counsel, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Room 
    10184, Washington, DC 20410, (202) 708-3200. A telecommunications 
    device for the hearing impaired (TTY) is available at (202) 708-3259. 
    (These are not toll-free numbers.)
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. General Background
    
        On March 4, 1995, President Clinton issued a memorandum to all 
    Federal departments and agencies regarding regulatory reinvention. In 
    response to this memorandum, the Department of Housing and Urban 
    Development conducted a page-by-page review of its regulations to 
    determine which can be eliminated, consolidated, or otherwise improved. 
    HUD has determined that the regulations for the Nonjudicial Foreclosure 
    of Multifamily Mortgages at 24 CFR part 27 can be improved and 
    streamlined by eliminating unnecessary provisions. The regulations for 
    Nonjudicial Foreclosure of Single Family Mortgages at 24 CFR part 29 
    were already issued in streamlined form in a final rule published on 
    November 15, 1995 (60 FR 57489). The Department has determined that 
    these single family provisions may appropriately be consolidated with 
    the multifamily provisions as a separate subpart in 24 CFR part 27. 
    This rule also removes certain single family requirements, as explained 
    below in this preamble, that are more restrictive than the authorizing 
    statute.
        The combined statutory and regulatory procedures for conducting 
    nonjudicial foreclosures have been placed in appendices to this final 
    rule. Appendix A provides a Guide for the multifamily procedures; 
    Appendix B provides a Guide for the Single Family provisions. The final 
    rule will be codified in the Code of Federal Regulations; the 
    appendices will not be codified. However, the appropriate appendix will 
    be included in information to be provided to foreclosure commissioners, 
    and which will be available to the public. HUD is striving to keep 
    communications about requirements as clear, simple and timely as 
    possible, and the Guides in the appendices present such a format.
    
    II. Multifamily Rule Changes
    
        Several provisions in the multifamily nonjudicial foreclosure 
    regulations repeat statutory language from the Multifamily Mortgage 
    Foreclosure Act of 1981 (the Act) (12 U.S.C. 3701 et seq.). It is 
    unnecessary to maintain statutory requirements in the Code of Federal 
    Regulations (CFR), since those requirements are otherwise fully 
    accessible and binding. Furthermore, if regulations contain statutory 
    language, HUD must amend the regulations whenever Congress amends the 
    statute. Therefore, this rule will remove repetitious statutory 
    language and, where appropriate, replace it with a citation to the 
    specific statutory section.
        Also being deleted from the regulatory text of part 27 is language 
    that is only advisory, such as the list of examples of terms which the 
    Secretary may require the purchaser to agree to in the current 
    Sec. 27.20(c).
    
    III. Single Family Rule Changes
    
        The single family requirements in the current part 29 have already 
    been streamlined in a final rule published on November 15, 1995 (60 FR 
    57484). These requirements are moved in this final rule to become 
    subpart B of part 27, and part 29 is removed.
        As a result of the initial use of this new authority to foreclose 
    mortgages by nonjudicial procedures, the Department has noted three 
    areas where the regulations at 24 CFR Secs. 29.103(b)(2), 29.109(b) and 
    29.111(a) are more restrictive than the authorizing statute, the Single 
    Family Mortgage Foreclosure Act of 1994 (the Statute), 12 U.S.C. 3751-
    3768. Because these restrictions present problems for efficient and 
    cost-effective implementation of the Statute, they are being removed. 
    The regulatory provisions in question, discussed below, require 
    inclusion of the description of the property as contained in the 
    security instrument in the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale; the 
    presence of the designated foreclosure commissioner at the foreclosure 
    sale; and the service by publication of the Notice of Default and 
    Foreclosure Sale prior to the revised date of an adjourned foreclosure 
    sale.
    
    Property Description in the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale
    
        In 12 U.S.C. 3757(4), the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale is 
    to include, among other items, ``* * * the street address or a 
    description of the location of the property, and a description of the 
    security property sufficient to identify the property to be sold.'' 
    [Underlining provided.] The provisions of the existing regulation on 
    this point, at 24 CFR 29.103(b)(2), are more restrictive than the 
    Statute. The regulatory provisions state that the Notice of Default and 
    Foreclosure Sale must contain, among other things, ``[t]he legal 
    description of the security property as contained in the mortgage 
    agreement.'' [Underlining provided.] HUD has found that in some 
    jurisdictions, the description contained in the security instrument can 
    be very lengthy, in fact, much longer than would be necessary to 
    sufficiently identify the property to be sold at the foreclosure sale. 
    Requiring an unnecessarily lengthy legal description can, in some 
    instances, result in additional expense in publishing the Notice of 
    Default and Foreclosure Sale, resulting in increased costs to the 
    insurance funds.
        In order to correct this situation, Sec. 29.103(b)(2) of the 
    existing rule is revised at Sec. 27.103(b)(2) of this rule to conform 
    the regulation to the less restrictive language in the statute.
    
    Presence of the Foreclosure Commissioner at the Sale
    
        While section 369B(b) of the Multifamily Housing Mortgage 
    Foreclosure Act of 1981 (12 U.S.C. 3710), pertaining to the conduct of 
    the sale, specifically requires the attendance of the foreclosure 
    commissioner at the foreclosure sale, the provisions of the
    
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    Single Family Mortgage Foreclosure Act of 1994 governing the conduct of 
    the sale are silent on attendance by the commissioner at the sale, see 
    12 U.S.C. 3760. Furthermore, Section 3760(b)(1)(C) of 12 U.S.C. 
    specifically provides that ``The foreclosure commissioner may serve as 
    auctioneer, or, in accordance with regulations of the Secretary, may 
    employ an auctioneer to be paid from the commission provided for in 
    section 3761(5).'' At section 3761(2) of 12 U.S.C., the statutory 
    authority governing foreclosure costs provides for the payment of costs 
    arising from ``[m]ileage * * * for posting notices and for the 
    foreclosure commissioner's or auctioneer's attendance at the sale * * 
    *.'' [Underlining provided.]
        The regulations at 24 CFR 29.109(b) presently provide that the 
    foreclosure commissioner or, an employee of the commissioner, if the 
    commissioner is not a natural person, must attend the foreclosure sale. 
    This has been found to be restrictive in situations where a sole single 
    family property is a great distance from a foreclosure commissioner's 
    location. This results in the commissioner having to spend an 
    inordinate amount of time and travel expense in order to personally 
    attend the sale or, in the alternative, it results in the 
    unavailability of foreclosure commissioners to accept such case 
    referrals. The regulation is therefore amended in this rule by not 
    including the language of Sec. 29.109(b).
    
    Service by Publication of Notice of an Adjourned Foreclosure Sale
    
        The Statute at 12 U.S.C. 3760(c)(2) requires service by publication 
    and mailing of the revised Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale when 
    a sale is adjourned to a later date, and permits publication to be made 
    on any of three separate days before the revised date of foreclosure 
    sale. The current section Sec. 29.111(a) requires publication of the 
    Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale to be made on any of three 
    consecutive days prior to the revised date of foreclosure sale so long 
    as the first publication is made at least seven days before the date to 
    which the sale has been adjourned. This requirement could in some 
    circumstances be impossible to comply with, because it does not take 
    into account cases in which there are no daily newspapers of general 
    circulation that would permit publication on three consecutive days. 
    The requirement in Sec. 29.111(a) for the first publication to be made 
    at least seven days before the sale is also not part of the Statute, 
    which only makes service by mail subject to the seven days requirement.
        This rule, at Sec. 27.111(a), returns to the statutory language 
    permitting publication to be made on any of three separate days before 
    the revised date of foreclosure sale. In addition, to give full 
    implementation to the Statute, which allows adjournment of the 
    foreclosure sale for ``not less than 9 and not more than 31 days,'' 
    this rule takes into account cases in which the frequency of 
    publication of newspapers of general circulation would not permit 
    publication on three separate days before the date to which the sale 
    has been adjourned. To avoid the frustration of the statutory provision 
    that permits adjournments of not less than 9 days, this rule provides 
    that if there is no newspaper of general circulation that would permit 
    publication on any of three separate days before the revised date of 
    foreclosure sale, the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale must be 
    posted, not less than nine days before the date to which the sale has 
    been adjourned, at the courthouse of any county or counties in which 
    the property is located, and at the place where the sale is to be held. 
    This provision is modeled on the exception to publication by posting 
    provision in the Statute at 12 U.S.C. 3758(3)(B), and avoids such a 
    Statute-frustrating result as not being able to adjourn a foreclosure 
    sale for less than 21 days in an area where a newspaper is published 
    only weekly.
    
    IV. Findings and Certifications
    
    Justification for Final Rulemaking
    
        HUD generally publishes a rule for public comment before issuing a 
    rule for effect, in accordance with its own regulations on rulemaking 
    in 24 CFR part 10. However, part 10 provides for exceptions to the 
    general rule if the agency finds good cause to omit advance notice and 
    public participation. The good cause requirement is satisfied when 
    prior public procedure is ``impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to 
    the public interest'' (24 CFR 10.1). HUD finds that good cause exists 
    to publish this rule for effect without first soliciting public 
    comment. This rule merely removes unnecessary regulatory provisions and 
    does not establish or affect substantive policy. Therefore, prior 
    public comment is unnecessary.
    
    Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
    
         Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 establishes 
    requirements for Federal agencies to assess the effects of their 
    regulatory actions on State, local, local and tribal governments and 
    the private sector. This rule does not impose any Federal mandates on 
    any State, local or tribal governments or the private sector within the 
    meaning of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
         The Secretary, in accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act 
    (5 U.S.C. 605(b)), has reviewed and approved this rule, and in so doing 
    certifies that this rule will not have a significant economic impact on 
    a substantial number of small entities. This rule merely streamlines 
    regulations by removing unnecessary provisions. The rule will have no 
    adverse or disproportionate economic impact on small businesses.
    
    Environmental Impact
    
        This rulemaking does not have an environmental impact. This 
    rulemaking simply amends an existing regulation by consolidating and 
    streamlining provisions. It does not change the environmental review 
    procedures or the physical impact of the program or the projects 
    assisted under the regulations being amended.
    
    Executive Order 12612, Federalism
    
        The General Counsel, as the Designated Official under section 6(a) 
    of Executive Order 12612, Federalism, has determined that this rule 
    will not have substantial direct effects on States or their political 
    subdivisions, or the relationship between the Federal government and 
    the States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among 
    the various levels of government. No programmatic or policy changes 
    that would affect the relationship between the Federal Government and 
    State and local governments will result from this rule.
    
    Executive Order 12606, The Family
    
        The General Counsel, as the Designated Official under Executive 
    Order 12606, The Family, has determined that this rule will not have 
    the potential for significant impact on family formation, maintenance, 
    or general well-being, and thus is not subject to review under the 
    Order. No significant change in existing HUD policies or programs will 
    result from promulgation of this rule.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    24 CFR Part 27
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Loan programs--housing and 
    community development.
    
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    24 CFR Part 29
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Loan programs--housing and 
    community development.
    
        Accordingly, under the authority 420 U.S.C. 3535(d) subtitle A of 
    title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
        1. Part 27 is revised to read as follows:
    
    PART 27--NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE OF MULTIFAMILY AND SINGLE FAMILY 
    MORTGAGES
    
    Subpart A--Nonjudicial Foreclosure of Multifamily Mortgages
    Sec.
    27.1  Purpose.
    27.2  Scope and applicability.
    27.3  Definitions.
    27.5  Prerequisites to foreclosure.
    27.10  Designation of a foreclosure commissioner.
    27.15  Notice of default and foreclosure sale.
    27.20  Conditions of foreclosure sale.
    27.25  Termination or adjournment of foreclosure sale.
    27.30  Conduct of the sale.
    27.35  Foreclosure costs.
    27.40  Disposition of sale proceeds.
    27.45  Transfer of title and possession.
    27.50  Management and disposition by the Secretary.
    Subpart B--Nonjudicial Foreclosure of Single Family Mortgages
    27.100  Purpose, Scope and Applicability.
    27.101  Definitions.
    27.102  Designation of foreclosure commissioner and substitute 
    commissioner.
    27.103  Notice of default and foreclosure sale.
    27.105  Service of Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale.
    27.107  Presale reinstatement.
    27.109  Conduct of sale.
    27.111  Adjournment or cancellation of sale.
    27.113  Foreclosure costs.
    27.115  Disposition of sales proceeds.
    27.117  Transfer of title and possession.
    27.119  Redemption rights.
    27.121  Record of foreclosure and sale.
    27.123  Deficiency judgment.
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1715b, 3701-3717, 3751-3768; 42 U.S.C. 
    1452b, 3535(d).
    
    Subpart A--Nonjudicial Foreclosure of Multifamily Mortgages
    
    
    Sec. 27.1  Purpose.
    
        The purpose of this subpart is to implement requirements for the 
    administration of the Multifamily Mortgage Foreclosure Act of 1981 (the 
    Act) (12 U.S.C. 3701-3717), that clarify, or are in addition to, the 
    requirements contained in the Act, which are not republished here and 
    must be consulted in conjunction with the requirements of this subpart. 
    The Act creates a uniform Federal remedy for foreclosure of multifamily 
    mortgages. Under a delegation of authority published on February 5, 
    1982 (47 FR 5468), the Secretary has delegated to the HUD General 
    Counsel his powers under the Act to appoint a foreclosure commissioner 
    or commissioners and to substitute therefor, to fix the compensation of 
    commissioners, and to promulgate implementing regulations.
    
    
    Sec. 27.2  Scope and applicability.
    
        (a) Under the Act and this subpart, the Secretary may foreclose on 
    any defaulted Secretary-held multifamily mortgage encumbering real 
    estate in any State. The Secretary may use the provisions of these 
    regulations to foreclose on any multifamily mortgage regardless of when 
    the mortgage was executed.
        (b) The Secretary may, at the Secretary's option, use other 
    procedures to foreclose defaulted multifamily mortgages, including 
    judicial foreclosure in Federal court and nonjudicial foreclosure under 
    State law. This subpart applies only to foreclosure procedures 
    authorized by the Act and not to any other foreclosure procedures the 
    Secretary may use.
    
    
    Sec. 27.3  Definitions.
    
        The definitions contained in the Act (at 12 U.S.C. 3702) shall 
    apply to this subpart, in addition to and as further clarified by the 
    following definitions. As used in this subpart:
        General Counsel means the General Counsel of the Department of 
    Housing and Urban Development;
        Multifamily mortgage does not include a mortgage covering a 
    property on which there is located a one- to four-family residence, 
    except when the one- to four-family residence is subject to a mortgage 
    pursuant to section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959 (12 U.S.C. 1701q), 
    or section 811 (42 U.S.C. 8013) of the National Affordable Housing Act. 
    The definition of multifamily mortgage also includes a mortgage taken 
    by the Secretary in connection with the previous sale of the project by 
    the Secretary (purchase money mortgage).
    
    
    Sec. 27.5  Prerequisites to foreclosure.
    
        Before commencement of a foreclosure under the Act and this 
    subpart, HUD will provide to the mortgagor an opportunity informally to 
    present reasons why the mortgage should not be foreclosed. Such 
    opportunity may be provided before or after the designation of the 
    foreclosure commissioner but before service of the notice of default 
    and foreclosure.
    
    
    Sec. 27.10  Designation of a foreclosure commissioner.
    
        (a) When the Secretary determines that a multifamily mortgage 
    should be foreclosed under the Act and this subpart, the General 
    Counsel will select and designate one or more foreclosure commissioners 
    to conduct the foreclosure and sale. The method of selection and 
    determination of the qualifications of the foreclosure commissioner 
    shall be at the discretion of the General Counsel, and the execution of 
    a designation pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section shall be 
    conclusive evidence that the commissioner selected has been determined 
    to be qualified by the General Counsel.
        (b) After selection of a foreclosure commissioner, the General 
    Counsel shall designate the commissioner in writing to conduct the 
    foreclosure and sale of the particular multifamily mortgage. The 
    written designation shall be duly acknowledged and shall state the name 
    and business or residential address of the commissioner and any other 
    information the General Counsel deems necessary. The designation shall 
    be effective upon execution by the General Counsel or his designate. 
    Upon receipt of the designation, the commissioner shall demonstrate 
    acceptance by signing the designation and returning a signed copy to 
    the General Counsel.
        (c) The General Counsel may at any time, with or without cause, 
    designate a substitute commissioner to replace a previously designated 
    commissioner. Designation of a substitute commissioner shall be in 
    writing and shall contain the same information and be made effective in 
    the same manner as the designation of the original commissioner. Upon 
    designation of a substitute commissioner, the substitute commissioner 
    shall serve a copy of the written notice of designation upon the 
    persons listed at sections 369(1) (A) through (C) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 
    3708(1) (A) through (C)) either by mail, in accordance with section 
    369(1) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 3708(1)), except that the time limitations 
    in that section will not apply, or by any other manner which in the 
    substitute commissioner's discretion is conducive to giving timely 
    notice of substitution.
    
    
    Sec. 27.15  Notice of default and foreclosure sale.
    
        (a) Within 45 days after accepting his or her designation to act as 
    commissioner, the commissioner shall commence the foreclosure by 
    serving a Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale.
    
    [[Page 48549]]
    
        (b) The Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale shall contain the 
    following information:
        (1) The Notice shall state that all deposits and the balance of the 
    purchase price shall be paid by certified or cashier's check. The 
    Notice shall state that no deposit will be required of the Secretary 
    when the Secretary bids at the foreclosure sale.
        (2) Any terms and conditions to which the purchaser at the 
    foreclosure sale must agree under Sec. 27.20. The Notice need not 
    describe at length each and every pertinent term and condition, 
    including any required use agreements and deed covenants, if it 
    describes these terms and conditions in a general way and if it states 
    that the precise terms will be available from the commissioner upon 
    request.
        (c) The Notice need not be mailed to mortgagors who have been 
    released from all obligations under the mortgage.
        (d) In deciding which newspaper or newspapers to select as general 
    circulation newspapers for purposes of publication of the required 
    notice, the commissioner need not select the newspaper with the largest 
    circulation.
        (e) In addition to Notice posting requirements included in the Act, 
    the Notice shall also be posted in the project office and in such other 
    appropriate conspicuous places as the commissioner deems appropriate 
    for providing notice to all tenants. Posting shall not be required if 
    the commissioner in his or her discretion finds that the act of posting 
    is likely to lead to a breach of the peace or may result in the 
    increased risk of vandalism or damage to the property. Any such finding 
    will be made in writing. Entry on the premises by the commissioner for 
    the purpose of posting shall be privileged as against all other 
    persons.
        (f) When service of the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale is 
    made by mail, the commissioner shall at the same time and in the same 
    manner serve a copy of the instrument by which the General Counsel, 
    under Sec. 27.10(b), has designated him or her to act as commissioner.
        (g) At least 7 days before the foreclosure sale, the commissioner 
    will record both the instrument designating him or her to act as 
    commissioner and the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale in the same 
    office or offices in which the mortgage was recorded.
    
    
    Sec. 27.20  Conditions of foreclosure sale.
    
        (a) The requirements of section 367(b)(2)(A) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 
    3706(b)(2)(A)) apply if a majority of the residential units in a 
    property subject to foreclosure sale pursuant to the Act and this 
    subpart are occupied by residential tenants either on the date of the 
    foreclosure sale or on the date on which the General Counsel designates 
    the foreclosure commissioner.
        (b) Terms which the Secretary may find appropriate to require 
    pursuant to section 367(b) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 3706(b)), and such 
    other provisions of law as may be applicable, may include provisions 
    relating to use and ownership of the project property, tenant admission 
    standards and procedures, rent schedules and increases, and project 
    operation and maintenance. In determining terms which may be 
    appropriate to require, the Secretary shall consider:
        (1) The history of the project, including the purposes of the 
    program under which the mortgage insurance or assistance was provided, 
    and any other program of HUD under which the project was developed or 
    otherwise assisted and the probable causes of project failure resulting 
    in its default;
        (2) A financial analysis of the project, including an appraisal of 
    the fair market value of the property for its highest and best use;
        (3) A physical analysis of the project, including the condition of 
    the structure and grounds, the need for rehabilitation or repairs, and 
    the estimated costs of any such rehabilitation or repairs;
        (4) The income levels of the occupants of the project;
        (5) Characteristics, including rental levels, of comparable housing 
    in the area, with particular reference to whether current conditions 
    and discernible trends in the area fairly indicate a likelihood that, 
    for the foreseeable future after foreclosure and sale, the project will 
    continue to provide rental or cooperative housing and market rentals 
    obtainable in the project will be affordable by low- or moderate-income 
    persons;
        (6) The availability of or need for rental housing for low- and 
    moderate-income persons in the area, including actions being taken or 
    projected to be taken to address such needs and the impact of such 
    actions on the project;
        (7) An assessment of the number of occupants who might be displaced 
    as a result of the manner of disposition;
        (8) The eligibility of the occupants of the property for rental 
    assistance under any program administered by HUD and the availability 
    of funding for such assistance if necessary in order that the units 
    occupied by such occupants will remain available to and affordable by 
    such persons, or if necessary in order to assure the financial 
    feasibility of the project after foreclosure and sale subject to the 
    terms to be required by the Secretary; and
        (9) Such other factors relating to the project as the Secretary 
    shall consider appropriate.
        (c) Terms which the Secretary may require to be agreed to by the 
    purchaser pursuant to section 367(b) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 3706(b)) 
    shall generally not be more restrictive, or binding for a longer 
    duration, than the terms by which the mortgagor was bound prior to the 
    foreclosure. For example: If the mortgage being foreclosed was held by 
    the Secretary under section 312 of the Housing Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 
    1452b), any terms required by the Secretary pursuant to this section 
    shall be in effect no longer than five years after the completion of 
    the rehabilitation work funded by the section 312 loan. No terms shall 
    be required pursuant to this section if the foreclosure sale occurs 
    more than five years after the completion of such rehabilitation work 
    (signified by the due date for commencement of amortization payments in 
    the section 312 loan note).
        (d) The limitation contained in paragraph (c) of this section 
    applies only to such terms as the Secretary may require the purchaser 
    to agree to, as a condition and term of the sale, under paragraph (a) 
    of this section. Nothing contained in paragraph (c) of this section 
    shall prevent the Secretary and the purchaser from entering into a 
    subsidy agreement under any program administered by the Secretary 
    containing terms binding upon either party which are longer in duration 
    than would be permitted to be required by paragraph (c) of this 
    section.
        (e) Any terms required by the Secretary to be agreed to by the 
    purchaser as a condition and term of sale under this section and 
    section 367(b) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 3706(b)) shall be embodied in a 
    use agreement to be executed by the Secretary and the purchaser. Such 
    terms also may be included, or referred to, in appropriate covenants 
    contained in the deed to be delivered by the foreclosure commissioner 
    under Sec. 27.45. Terms required by the Secretary pursuant to this 
    section shall be stated or described in the Notice of Default and 
    Foreclosure Sale under Sec. 27.15.
    
    
    Sec. 27.25  Termination or adjournment of foreclosure sale.
    
        (a) Before withdrawing the security property from foreclosure under 
    section 369A(a) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 3709(a)), the commissioner shall 
    notify the Secretary of the proposed withdrawal by telephone or 
    telegram and shall provide the Secretary with a written statement of
    
    [[Page 48550]]
    
    the reasons for the proposed withdrawal along with all documents 
    submitted by the mortgagor in support of the proposed withdrawal. Upon 
    receipt of this statement, the Secretary shall have 10 days within 
    which to demonstrate orally or in writing why the security property 
    should not be withdrawn from foreclosure. The Secretary shall provide 
    the mortgagor with a copy of any statement prepared by the Secretary in 
    opposition to the proposed withdrawal at the same time the statement is 
    submitted to the commissioner. If the Secretary receives the 
    commissioner's written statement less than 10 days before the scheduled 
    foreclosure sale, the sale shall automatically be postponed for 14 
    days. Under these circumstances, notice of the rescheduled sale shall 
    be served as described in section 369B(c) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 
    3710(c)).
        (b) The commissioner may not withdraw the security property from 
    foreclosure under section 369A(a) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 3709(a)) more 
    than once unless the Secretary consents in writing to such withdrawal.
        (c) The commissioner shall, in the case of a sale adjourned to a 
    later date, mail a copy of the revised Notice of Default and 
    Foreclosure Sale to the Secretary at least seven days before the date 
    to which the sale has been adjourned.
        (d) If upon application by the mortgagor, the commissioner refuses 
    to withdraw the property from foreclosure under section 369A(a) of the 
    Act (12 U.S.C. 3709(a)), the commissioner shall provide the mortgagor 
    and the Secretary with a written statement of the reasons for the 
    refusal.
    
    
    Sec. 27.30   Conduct of the sale.
    
        (a) The commissioner shall accept written one-price sealed bids 
    from any party including the Secretary so long as those bids conform to 
    the requirements described in the Notice of Default and Foreclosure 
    Sale. The commissioner shall announce the name of each such bidder and 
    the amount of the bid. The commissioner shall accept oral bids from any 
    party, including parties who submitted one-price sealed bids, if those 
    oral bids conform to the requirements described in the Notice of 
    Default and Foreclosure Sale. The commissioner will announce the amount 
    of the high bid and the name of the successful bidder before the close 
    of the sale.
        (b) Relatives of the commissioner who may not bid at the 
    foreclosure sale include parents, siblings, spouses and children. 
    Related business entities which may not bid include entities or 
    concerns whose relationship with the commissioner at the time the 
    commissioner is designated is such that, directly or indirectly, one 
    concern or individual formulates, directs, or controls the other 
    concern; or has the power to formulate, direct, or control the other 
    concern; or has the responsibility and authority either to prevent in 
    the first instance, or promptly to correct, the offensive conduct of 
    the other concern. Business concerns are also affiliates of each other 
    when a third party is similarly situated with respect to both concerns.
        (c) If the commissioner employs an auctioneer to conduct the 
    foreclosure sale, the auctioneer must be a licensed auctioneer, an 
    officer of State or local government, or any other person who commonly 
    conducts foreclosure sales in the area in which the security property 
    is located.
    
    
    Sec. 27.35   Foreclosure costs.
    
        Pursuant to section 369C(5) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 3711(5)), a 
    commission to the foreclosure commissioner for the conduct of the 
    foreclosure will be paid in an amount to be determined by the General 
    Counsel. A commission may be allowed to the commissioner 
    notwithstanding termination of the sale or appointment of a substitute 
    commissioner before the sale takes place.
    
    
    Sec. 27.40   Disposition of sale proceeds.
    
        (a) The priority of the Secretary's lien shall be determined by the 
    Federal first-in-time first-in-right rule. State laws affording 
    priority to liens recorded after the mortgage are preempted.
        (b) If there is more than one party holding a lien or assessment 
    payable from sales proceeds, the claim of each party holding the same 
    kind of lien or assessment will be given the relative priority to which 
    it would be entitled under the law of the State in which the security 
    property is located.
        (c) The commissioner will keep such records as will permit the 
    Secretary to verify the costs claimed under section 369C of the Act (12 
    U.S.C. 3711), and otherwise to audit the commissioner's disposition of 
    the sale proceeds.
    
    
    Sec. 27.45   Transfer of title and possession.
    
        (a) If the Secretary is the successful bidder, the foreclosure 
    commissioner shall issue a deed to the Secretary upon receipt of the 
    amount needed to pay the costs listed in sections 369D (1) through (3) 
    of the Act (12 U.S.C. 3712(1) through (3)). If the Secretary is not the 
    successful bidder, the foreclosure commissioner shall issue a deed to 
    the purchaser upon receipt of the entire purchase price and execution 
    by the Secretary and the purchaser of any use agreement referred to in 
    Sec. 27.20(e). Any covenants reflecting terms required by Sec. 27.20 
    shall be contained in the commissioner's deed.
        (b) Subject to any terms required to be agreed to by Sec. 27.20, 
    any commercial tenant and any residential tenant remaining in 
    possession after the expiration of his or her lease or after the 
    passage of one year, whichever event occurs first, shall be deemed a 
    tenant at sufferance and may be evicted in accordance with applicable 
    State or local law.
    
    
    Sec. 27.50   Management and disposition by the Secretary.
    
        When the Secretary is the purchaser of the security property, the 
    Secretary shall manage and dispose of it in accordance with section 203 
    of the Housing and Community Development Amendments of 1978, as 
    amended, 12 U.S.C. 1701z-11, and in accordance with 24 CFR part 290.
    
    Subpart B--Nonjudicial Foreclosure of Single Family Mortgages
    
    
    Sec. 27.100   Purpose, Scope and Applicability.
    
        (a) Purpose. The purpose of this subpart is to implement 
    requirements for the administration of the Single Family Mortgage 
    Foreclosure Act of 1994 (the Statute), 12 U.S.C. 3751-3768, that 
    clarify, or are in addition to, the requirements contained in the 
    Statute, which are not republished here and must be consulted in 
    conjunction with the requirements of this subpart.
        (b) Scope. The Secretary may foreclose on any defaulted single 
    family mortgage described in the Statute regardless of when the 
    mortgage was executed.
        (c) Applicability. The Secretary may, at the Secretary's option, 
    use other procedures to foreclose defaulted single family mortgages, 
    including judicial foreclosure in State or Federal Court, and 
    nonjudicial foreclosures under State law or any other Federal law. This 
    subpart applies only to foreclosure procedures authorized by the 
    Statute and not to any other foreclosure procedures the Secretary may 
    use.
    
    
    Sec. 27.101   Definitions.
    
        The definitions contained in the Statute (at 12 U.S.C. 3752) shall 
    apply to this subpart, in addition to and as further clarified by the 
    following definitions. As used in this subpart:
        County means a political subdivision of a State or Territory of the 
    United States, created to aid in the administration of State law for 
    the purpose of local self government, and
    
    [[Page 48551]]
    
    includes a parish or any other equivalent subdivision.
        Mortgage is as defined in the Statute except that the reference to 
    property as ``(real, personal or mixed)'' means ``any property (real or 
    mixed real and personal).''
        Mortgage agreement is as defined in the Statute, and also means any 
    other similar instrument or instruments creating the security interest 
    in the real estate for the repayment of the note or debt instrument.
        Mortgagor is as defined in the Statute, except that the reference 
    to ``trustee'' means ``trustor.''
        Record; Recorded means to enter or entered in public land record 
    systems established under State statutes for the purpose of imparting 
    constructive notice to purchasers of real property for value and 
    without knowledge, and includes ``register'' and ``registered'' in the 
    instance of registered land, and ``file'' and its variants in the 
    context of entering documents in public land records.
        Secretary means the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, 
    acting by and through any authorized designee exclusive of the 
    foreclosure commissioner.
        Security Property is as defined in the statute except that the 
    reference to property as ``(real, personal or mixed)'' means ``any 
    property (real or mixed real and personal).''
    
    
    Sec. 29.102  Designation of foreclosure commissioner and substitute 
    commissioner.
    
        (a) The Secretary may designate foreclosure commissioners, 
    including substitute commissioners, as set forth in the Statute.
        (b) The method of selection and determination of the qualifications 
    of the foreclosure commissioner shall be at the discretion of the 
    Secretary. The execution of a designation pursuant to this section 
    shall be conclusive evidence that the commissioner selected has been 
    determined to be qualified by the Secretary. The designation is 
    effective upon execution.
    
    
    Sec. 27.103  Notice of default and foreclosure sale.
    
        (a) The foreclosure commissioner shall commence the foreclosure 
    under the procedures set forth in the Statute.
        (b) The Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale (Notice) shall 
    include, in addition to the provisions as required by the Statute:
        (1) The foreclosure commissioner's telephone number;
        (2) A description of the security property sufficient to identify 
    the property to be sold;
        (3) The date the mortgage was recorded;
        (4) Identification of the failure to make payment, including the 
    entire amount delinquent as of a date specified, a statement generally 
    describing the other costs that must be paid if the mortgage is to be 
    reinstated, the due date of the earliest principal installment payment 
    remaining wholly unpaid as of the date on which the notice is issued 
    upon which the foreclosure is based, or a description of any other 
    default or defaults upon which foreclosure is based, and the 
    acceleration of the secured indebtedness; and
        (5) The bidding and payment requirements for the foreclosure sale, 
    including the time and method of payment of the balance of the 
    foreclosure purchase price, that all deposits and the balance of the 
    purchase price shall be paid by certified or cashier's check, and that 
    no deposit will be required of the Secretary when the Secretary bids at 
    the foreclosure sale.
    
    
    Sec. 27.105  Service of Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale.
    
        (a) The Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale shall be served in 
    accordance with the provisions of the Statute. When notice is sent by 
    mail, multiple mailings are not required to be sent to any party with 
    multiple capacities, e.g., an original mortgagor who is the security 
    property owner and lives in one of the units. The date of the receipt 
    for the postage paid for the mailing may serve as proof of the date of 
    mailing of the notice.
        (b) Notice need not be mailed to any mortgagors who have been 
    released from all obligations under the mortgage.
    
    
    Sec. 27.107  Presale reinstatement.
    
        (a) The foreclosure commissioner shall withdraw the security 
    property from foreclosure and cancel the foreclosure sale only in 
    accordance with the provisions of the Statute and as more fully 
    provided in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section in regard to presale 
    reinstatements.
        (b) To obtain a presale reinstatement in cases involving a monetary 
    default, there must be tendered to the foreclosure commissioner before 
    public auction is completed all amounts which would be due under the 
    mortgage agreement if payments under the mortgage had not been 
    accelerated and all costs of foreclosure incurred for which payment 
    from the proceeds of foreclosure is provided in the Statute, and the 
    foreclosure commissioner must find that there are no nonmonetary 
    defaults; provided, however, that the Secretary may refuse to cancel a 
    foreclosure sale pursuant to this subparagraph if the current mortgagor 
    or owner of record has, on one or more previous occasions, caused a 
    foreclosure of the mortgage, commenced pursuant to the Statute and this 
    subpart or otherwise, to be canceled by curing a default.
        (c) To obtain a presale reinstatement in cases involving a 
    nonmonetary default:
        (1) The foreclosure commissioner, upon application of the mortgagor 
    before the date of foreclosure sale, must find that all nonmonetary 
    defaults are cured and that there are no monetary defaults; and
        (2) There must be tendered to the foreclosure commissioner before 
    public auction is completed all amounts due under the mortgage 
    agreement (excluding all amounts which would be due under the mortgage 
    agreement if the mortgage payments had been accelerated), including all 
    amounts of expenditures secured by the mortgage and all costs of 
    foreclosure incurred for which payment would be made from the proceeds 
    of foreclosure as provided in the Statute.
        (d) Before withdrawing the security property from foreclosure, the 
    foreclosure commissioner shall notify the Secretary of the proposed 
    withdrawal by telephone or other telecommunication device and shall 
    also provide the Secretary with a written statement of the reasons for 
    the proposed withdrawal along with all documents submitted by the 
    mortgagor in support of the proposed withdrawal. Upon receipt of this 
    statement, the Secretary shall have ten (10) days in which to 
    demonstrate why the security property should not be withdrawn from 
    foreclosure, and if the Secretary makes this demonstration, the 
    property shall not be withdrawn from foreclosure. The Secretary shall 
    provide the mortgagor with a copy of any statement prepared by the 
    Secretary in opposition to the proposed withdrawal at the same time the 
    statement is submitted to the foreclosure commissioner. If the 
    Secretary receives the foreclosure commissioner's written statement 
    less than 10 days before the scheduled foreclosure sale, the sale shall 
    automatically be adjourned for 14 days, during which time it may be 
    cancelled. Notice of the re-scheduled sale, if any, shall be served as 
    described in Sec. 27.111.
    
    
    Sec. 27.109  Conduct of sale.
    
        (a) The foreclosure sale shall be conducted in a manner and at a 
    time and place as identified in the Notice of Default and Foreclosure 
    Sale and in
    
    [[Page 48552]]
    
    accordance with the provisions of the Statute.
        (b) In addition to bids made in person at the sale, the foreclosure 
    commissioner shall accept written one-price sealed bids from any party, 
    including the Secretary, for entry by announcement at the sale so long 
    as those bids conform to the requirements described in the Notice of 
    Default and Foreclosure Sale. The foreclosure commissioner shall 
    announce the name of each such bidder and the amount of the bid. The 
    commissioner shall accept oral bids from any party, including parties 
    who submitted one-price sealed bids, if those oral bids conform to the 
    requirements in the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale. Before the 
    close of the sale the commissioner shall announce the amount of the 
    high bid and the name of the successful bidder. If the successful 
    bidder fails to comply with the terms of the sale, the HUD Field Office 
    representative will provide instructions to the commissioner about 
    offering the property to the second highest bidder, or having a new 
    sale, or other instruction at the discretion of the HUD representative.
        (c) Prohibited participants. Relatives of the foreclosure 
    commissioner who may not bid include parents, siblings, spouses and 
    children. A related business entity that may not bid or whose employees 
    may not bid is one whose relationship (at the time the foreclosure 
    commissioner is designated and during the term of service as 
    foreclosure commissioner) with the entity of the foreclosure 
    commissioner is such that, directly or indirectly, one entity 
    formulates, directs, or controls the other entity; or has the power to 
    formulate, direct, or control the other entity; or has the 
    responsibility and authority to prevent, or promptly to correct, the 
    offensive conduct of the other entity.
        (d) Auctioneers. If the commissioner employs an auctioneer to 
    conduct the foreclosure sale, the auctioneer must be a licensed 
    auctioneer, an officer of State or local government, or any other 
    person who commonly conducts foreclosure sales in the area in which the 
    security property is located.
    
    
    Sec. 27.111  Adjournment or cancellation of sale.
    
        (a) The foreclosure commissioner may, before or at the time of the 
    foreclosure sale, adjourn or cancel the foreclosure sale in accordance 
    with the provisions of the Statute. The publication of the Notice of 
    Default and Foreclosure Sale, revised pursuant to the Statute, may be 
    made on any of three separate days before the revised date of 
    foreclosure sale. If there is no newspaper of general circulation that 
    would permit publication on any of three separate days before the 
    revised date of foreclosure sale, the Notice of Default and Foreclosure 
    Sale must be posted, not less than nine days before the date to which 
    the sale has been adjourned, at the courthouse of any county or 
    counties in which the property is located, and at the place where the 
    sale is to be held. The commissioner must also, in the case of a sale 
    adjourned to a later date, mail a copy of the revised Notice of Default 
    and Foreclosure Sale to the Secretary at least seven days before the 
    date to which the sale has been adjourned.
        (b) When a substitute commissioner is designated by the Secretary 
    to replace a previously designated foreclosure commissioner, the sale 
    shall continue without prejudice unless the substitute commissioner 
    finds, in that commissioner's sole discretion, that continuation of the 
    foreclosure sale will unfairly affect the interests of the mortgagor. 
    Any such finding shall be in writing. If the substitute commissioner 
    makes such a finding, the substitute commissioner shall cancel or 
    adjourn the sale.
    
    
    Sec. 27.113  Foreclosure costs.
    
        A commission may be allowed to the foreclosure commissioner 
    notwithstanding termination of the sale or appointment of a substitute 
    commissioner before the sale takes place.
    
    
    Sec. 27.115  Disposition of sales proceeds.
    
        The foreclosure commissioner will keep such records as will permit 
    the Secretary to verify the costs claimed, and otherwise to enable the 
    Secretary to audit the foreclosure commissioner's disposition of the 
    sale proceeds.
    
    
    Sec. 27.117  Transfer of title and possession.
    
        (a) If the Secretary is the successful bidder, the foreclosure 
    commissioner shall issue a deed to the Secretary upon receipt of the 
    amount needed to pay the costs of tax liens and prior liens, as set 
    forth in 12 U.S.C. 3762(a)(2) and (a)(3). If the Secretary is not the 
    successful bidder, the foreclosure commissioner shall issue a deed to 
    the purchaser or purchasers upon receipt of the entire purchase price 
    in accordance with the terms of the sale as provided in the Notice of 
    Default and Foreclosure Sale.
        (b) The register of deeds or other appropriate official in the 
    county where the property is located shall, upon tendering of the 
    customary recording fees, accept all instruments pertaining to the 
    foreclosure which are submitted by the foreclosure commissioner for 
    recordation. The instruments to be accepted shall include, but not be 
    limited to, the foreclosure commissioner's deed. If the foreclosure 
    commissioner elects to include the recitations required under the 
    Statute (12 U.S.C. 3764) in an affidavit or an addendum to the deed, 
    the affidavit or addendum shall be accepted along with the deed for 
    recordation. The Clerk of the Court or other appropriate official shall 
    cancel all liens as requested by the foreclosure commissioner.
    
    
    Sec. 27.119  Redemption rights.
    
        Only for purposes of redemption rights under the Statute, a 
    foreclosure shall be considered completed upon the date and at the time 
    of the foreclosure sale.
    
    
    Sec. 27.121  Record of foreclosure and sale.
    
        The statements regarding the foreclosed mortgage required to 
    establish a sufficient record shall include the date the mortgage was 
    recorded. The statements regarding the service of the Notice of Default 
    and Foreclosure Sale shall include the names and addresses of the 
    persons to whom the Notice was mailed and the date on which the Notice 
    was mailed, the name of the newspaper in which the Notice was published 
    and the dates of publication, and the date on which service by posting, 
    if required, was accomplished.
    
    
    Sec. 27.123  Deficiency judgment.
    
        If the price at which the security property is sold at the 
    foreclosure sale is less than the unpaid balance of the debt secured by 
    such property after disposition of sale proceeds in accordance with the 
    order of priority provided under the Statute, the Secretary may refer 
    the matter to the Attorney General who may commence an action or 
    actions against any and all debtors to recover the deficiency, unless 
    such an action is specifically prohibited by the mortgage.
    
    PART 29--[REMOVED]
    
        2. Part 29 is removed.
    
        Dated: August 28, 1996.
    Henry G. Cisneros,
    Secretary.
    
        Note: The following appendices A and B will not be codified in 
    title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
    
    Appendix A: Nonjudicial Foreclosure of Multifamily Mortgages--Guide
    
    Sec.
    1. Purpose.
    2. Scope and applicability.
    3. Definitions.
    
    [[Page 48553]]
    
    4. Prerequisites to foreclosure.
    5. Designation of a foreclosure commissioner.
    6. Notice of default and foreclosure sale.
    7. Conditions of foreclosure sale.
    8. Termination or adjournment of foreclosure sale.
    9. Conduct of the sale.
    10. Foreclosure costs.
    11. Disposition of sale proceeds.
    12. Transfer of title and possession.
    13. Redemption rights.
    14. Record of foreclosure and sale.
    15. Management and disposition by the Secretary.
    16. Computation of time.
    
    1. Purpose
    
        The purpose of this guide is to present, in a single document, 
    the statutory and regulatory requirements of the Multifamily 
    Mortgage Foreclosure Act of 1981 (the Act) (12 U.S.C. 3701-3717). 
    Although it presents the regulatory and statutory requirements in a 
    combined format, this guide is a secondary source for these 
    requirements. The Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), at 24 CFR part 
    27, subpart A, is the primary, governing source for regulatory 
    requirements, and the Act is the primary, governing source for 
    statutory requirements. Any reference in this Guide to the 
    provisions of the Act includes the requirements of 24 CFR part 27, 
    subpart A.
        The Act creates a uniform Federal remedy for foreclosure of 
    multifamily mortgages. Under a delegation of authority published on 
    February 5, 1982 (47 FR 5468), the Secretary has delegated to the 
    HUD General Counsel his powers under the Act to appoint a 
    foreclosure commissioner or commissioners and to substitute 
    therefor, to fix the compensation of commissioners, and to 
    promulgate implementing regulations.
    
    2. Scope and Applicability
    
        (a) Under the Act, the Secretary may foreclose on any defaulted 
    Secretary-held multifamily mortgage encumbering real estate in any 
    State, regardless of when the mortgage was executed.
        (b) The Secretary may, at the Secretary's option, use other 
    procedures to foreclose defaulted multifamily mortgages, including 
    judicial foreclosure in Federal court and nonjudicial foreclosure 
    under State law. The requirements described in this Guide apply only 
    to foreclosure procedures authorized by the Act and not to any other 
    foreclosure procedures the Secretary may use.
    
    3. Definitions
    
        As used in this Guide:
        County means county as defined in section 2 of title I, United 
    States Code.
        General Counsel means the General Counsel of the Department of 
    Housing and Urban Development.
        Mortgage means a deed of trust, mortgage, deed to secure debt, 
    security agreement, or any other form of instrument under which any 
    interest in property, real, personal or mixed, or any interest in 
    property including leaseholds, life estates, reversionary interests, 
    and any other estates under applicable State law, is conveyed in 
    trust, mortgaged, encumbered, pledged, or otherwise rendered subject 
    to a lien, for the purpose of securing the payment of money or the 
    performance of an obligation.
        Mortgage agreement means the note or debt instrument and the 
    mortgage instrument, deed of trust instrument, trust deed, or 
    instrument or instruments creating the mortgage, including any 
    instruments incorporated by reference therein (including any 
    applicable regulatory agreement), and any instrument or agreement 
    amending or modifying any of the foregoing.
        Mortgagor means the obligor, grantor, or trustor named in the 
    mortgage agreement and, unless the context otherwise indicates, 
    includes the current owner of record of the security property 
    whether or not personally liable on the mortgage debt.
        Multifamily mortgage means a mortgage held by the Secretary, 
    covering any property pursuant to:
        (1) Section 608 of the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1743);
        (2) Section 801 of the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1748);
        (3) Title II of the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1707-1715z-
    20);
        (4) Title X of the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1749aa);
        (5) Section 312 of the Housing Act of 1964, as it existed 
    immediately before its repeal by section 289 of the Cranston-
    Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 1452b);
        (6) Section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959, as it existed 
    immediately before its amendment by section 801 of the Cranston-
    Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1701q);
        (7) Section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959, as amended by 
    section 801 of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act 
    (12 U.S.C. 1701q); and
        (8) Section 811 of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable 
    Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 8013).
        Multifamily mortgage does not include a property on which there 
    is located a one- to four-family residence, except when the one- to 
    four-family residence is subject to a mortgage pursuant to section 
    202 of the Housing Act of 1959, or section 811 of the National 
    Affordable Housing Act. The definition of multifamily mortgage also 
    includes a mortgage taken by the Secretary in connection with the 
    previous sale of the project by the Secretary (purchase money 
    mortgage).
        Person includes any individual, group of individuals, 
    association, partnership, corporation, or organization.
        Record and recorded include register and registered in the 
    instance of registered land.
        Secretary means the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
        Security property means the property, real, personal or mixed, 
    or an interest in property, including leaseholds, life estates, 
    reversionary interest and any other estates under applicable State 
    law, together with fixtures and other interests subject to the lien 
    of the mortgage under applicable State law.
        State means the several States, the District of Columbia, the 
    Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the territories and possessions of the 
    United States, and the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, and 
    Indian tribes as defined by the Secretary.
    
    4. Prerequisites to Foreclosure
    
        (a) The Secretary may commence foreclosure under the Act upon 
    the breach of a covenant or condition in the mortgage agreement for 
    which foreclosure is authorized under the mortgage. No such 
    foreclosure may be commenced unless any previously pending 
    proceeding, judicial or nonjudicial, separately instituted by the 
    Secretary to foreclose the mortgage in a manner other than under the 
    Act, has been withdrawn, dismissed or otherwise terminated. The 
    Secretary shall not institute any separate foreclosure proceedings, 
    judicial or nonjudicial, during the pendency of a foreclosure 
    pursuant to the Act. Nothing in the Act shall preclude the Secretary 
    from enforcing any right, other than foreclosure, under applicable 
    State law, including any right to obtain a monetary judgment. 
    Nothing in the Act shall preclude the Secretary from foreclosing 
    under the Act where the Secretary has obtained or is seeking any 
    other remedy available pursuant to Federal or State Law or under the 
    mortgage agreement, including, but not limited to the appointment of 
    a receiver; mortgagee-in-possession status; relief under an 
    assignment of rents; or transfer to a nonprofit entity in accordance 
    with section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959 (as amended by section 
    801 of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act), or 
    section 811 of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing 
    Act.
        (b) Before commencement of a foreclosure under the Act, HUD will 
    provide to the mortgagor an opportunity informally to present 
    reasons why the mortgage should not be foreclosed. Such opportunity 
    may be provided before or after the designation of the foreclosure 
    commissioner but before service of the notice of default and 
    foreclosure.
    
    5. Designation of a Foreclosure Commissioner
    
        (a) When the Secretary determines that a multifamily mortgage 
    should be foreclosed under the Act, the General Counsel will select 
    and designate a foreclosure commissioner to conduct the foreclosure 
    and sale. In order to conduct the foreclosure, the foreclosure 
    commissioner has a nonjudicial power of sale. The commissioner, if a 
    natural person, shall be a resident of the State in which the 
    security property is located. If a natural person is designated as 
    commissioner, he or she shall be designated by name, except if the 
    commissioner is designated in his or her capacity as an official or 
    employee of the State or local government where the security 
    property is located, the designation may be made by title or 
    position instead of by name. If not a natural person, the 
    commissioner must be duly authorized to transact business under the 
    laws of the State in which the security property is located. The 
    commissioner shall be a person who is determined by the General 
    Counsel to be responsible, financially sound, and competent to 
    conduct the foreclosure. The foreclosure commissioner may be an 
    individual, group of individuals, association, partnership, 
    corporation or organization. The method of selection and 
    determination of the
    
    [[Page 48554]]
    
    qualifications of the foreclosure commissioner shall be at the 
    discretion of the General Counsel, and the execution of a 
    designation pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section shall be 
    conclusive evidence that the commissioner selected has been 
    determined to be qualified by the General Counsel.
        (b) After selection of a foreclosure commissioner, the General 
    Counsel shall designate the commissioner in writing to conduct the 
    foreclosure and sale of the particular multifamily mortgage. The 
    written designation shall be duly acknowledged and shall state the 
    name and business or residential address of the commissioner and any 
    other information the General Counsel deems necessary. The 
    designation shall be effective upon execution by the General Counsel 
    or his designate. Upon receipt of the designation, the commissioner 
    shall demonstrate acceptance by signing the designation and 
    returning a signed copy to the General Counsel.
        (c) The General Counsel may designate more than one commissioner 
    to foreclose a multifamily mortgage.
        (d) The General Counsel may at any time, with or without cause, 
    designate a substitute commissioner to replace a previously 
    designated commissioner. Designation of a substitute commissioner 
    shall be in writing and shall contain the same information and be 
    made effective in the same manner as the designation of the original 
    commissioner. Upon designation of a substitute commissioner, the 
    substitute commissioner shall serve a copy of the written notice of 
    designation upon the persons listed at sections 6.(c) (1) through 
    (3) of this Guide either by mail, in accordance with section 6.(c) 
    of this Guide, except that the time limitations in that section will 
    not apply, or by any other manner which in the substitute 
    commissioner's discretion is conducive to giving timely notice of 
    substitution.
        (e) The Secretary shall be the guarantor of payment of any 
    judgment against the foreclosure commissioner for damages based on 
    the commissioner's failure properly to perform the commissioner's 
    duties. As between the Secretary and the mortgagor, the Secretary 
    shall bear the risk of any financial default by the foreclosure 
    commissioner. In the event that the Secretary makes any payment 
    pursuant to this paragraph, the Secretary shall be fully subrogated 
    to the rights satisfied by such payment.
    
    6. Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale
    
        (a) Within 45 days after accepting his or her designation to act 
    as commissioner, the commissioner shall commence the foreclosure by 
    serving a Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale.
        (b) The Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale shall contain the 
    following information which, except for paragraphs (b) (2) and (9) 
    of this section, will be supplied to the commissioner by the 
    Secretary.
        (1) Name and address of the foreclosure commissioner.
        (2) Date of the Notice.
        (3) Names of the Secretary, the original mortgagor and the 
    original mortgagee.
        (4) A description of the location of the security property, or 
    portion thereof to be sold, which is sufficient to identify it 
    including, if appropriate, the street address.
        (5) The date of the mortgage.
        (6) The name of the office or offices in which the mortgage is 
    recorded.
        (7) The book and page in which the mortgage was recorded or, if 
    appropriate, the mortgage's document or accession number.
        (8) A description of the mortgagor's failure to make payment, 
    including the due date of the earliest installment payment remaining 
    wholly unpaid as of the date of the Notice or, if appropriate, of 
    the other default or defaults upon which foreclosure is based; and a 
    statement that the secured debt has been accelerated.
        (9) The date, exact time and place of the foreclosure sale. The 
    sale shall not be scheduled for a date less than 30 days after the 
    due date of the earliest unpaid installment or the earliest 
    occurrence of a nonmonetary default. The sale must be scheduled to 
    begin at a time between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. local 
    time on a day other than Sunday or a public holiday as defined by 5 
    U.S.C. 6103(a) or State law. The sale must be scheduled for (i) a 
    place where real estate foreclosure auctions are customarily held in 
    the county or one of the counties in which the property to be sold 
    is located, or (ii) a courthouse in such a county, or (iii) a site 
    at or on the property to be sold. Sale of property located in more 
    than one county may be held in any one of the counties in which any 
    part of the security property is situated.
        (10) A statement that the foreclosure is being conducted in 
    accordance with the Act.
        (11) The costs, if any, to be paid by the purchaser upon 
    transfer of title.
        (12) The bidding and payment requirements for the foreclosure 
    sale, including the required deposit, the method of deposit, and the 
    time and method of payment for the balance of the purchase price. 
    The Notice shall state that all deposits and the balance of the 
    purchase price shall be paid by certified or cashier's check. The 
    Notice shall state that no deposit will be required of the Secretary 
    when the Secretary bids at the foreclosure sale.
        (13) Any terms and conditions to which the purchaser at the 
    foreclosure sale must agree, as listed in section 7 of this Guide. 
    The Notice need not describe at length each and every pertinent term 
    and condition, including any required use agreements and deed 
    covenants, if it describes these terms and conditions in a general 
    way and if it states that the precise terms will be available from 
    the commissioner upon request.
        (c) The commissioner shall serve the Notice of Default and 
    Foreclosure Sale upon the following persons in the following manner, 
    and no additional notice shall be required to be served 
    notwithstanding any notice requirements of State or local law:
        (1) By certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, 
    sent, at least 21 days before the original scheduled date of the 
    foreclosure sale, to the owner of record of the security property as 
    of 45 days before the original scheduled date of the foreclosure 
    sale. The Notice shall be mailed to the owner at the address shown 
    in the mortgage or to the address of the security property, or, in 
    the commissioner's discretion, to any address believed to be that of 
    the owner; and
        (2) By certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, 
    sent, at least 21 days before the original scheduled date of the 
    foreclosure sale, to the original mortgagor and all subsequent 
    mortgagors of record and all other persons who appear on the public 
    record or in the mortgage agreement to be liable for all or part of 
    the mortgage debt. The Notice need not be mailed to mortgagors who 
    have been released from all obligations under the mortgage. The 
    Notice shall be mailed to the mortgagor at the address shown in the 
    mortgage, or to the address of the property, or, in the 
    commissioner's discretion, to any address believed to be that of the 
    mortgagor or mortgagors; and
        (3) By certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, 
    sent, at least 10 days before the original scheduled date of the 
    foreclosure sale, to all persons having liens of record on the 
    security property which were placed on record at least 45 days 
    before the scheduled foreclosure sale. The Notice shall be mailed to 
    lien holders at their address of record, or to any address the 
    commissioner believes to be that of the lien holder; and
        (4) By publication of a copy of the Notice of Default and 
    Foreclosure Sale once a week during three successive calendar weeks 
    in a newspaper of general circulation in the county or counties in 
    which the security property is located. To the extent practicable, 
    the newspaper or newspapers chosen shall have circulation which is 
    conducive to achieving notice of foreclosure by publication. In 
    deciding which newspaper or newspapers have such circulation, the 
    commissioner need not select the newspaper with the largest 
    circulation. The date of the last publication shall be not less than 
    four nor more than twelve days before the sale date. If there is no 
    newspaper of general circulation in the county or counties in which 
    the security property is located, service shall be made by posting 
    the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale in at least three public 
    places in each such county at least 21 days prior to the date of 
    sale. The Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale which is published 
    pursuant to this paragraph may omit a description of the default, as 
    otherwise required by paragraph (b)(8) of this section, if the 
    commissioner, in his or her discretion, so determines; and
        (5) By posting a copy of the Notice of Default and Foreclosure 
    Sale in a prominent place at or near the security property for at 
    least 15 consecutive days before the foreclosure sale. If the 
    property to be sold consists of two or more noncontiguous parcels of 
    land, a copy of the Notice shall be posted in a prominent place on 
    each such parcel. If the property consists of two or more separate 
    buildings, a copy of the Notice shall be posted in a prominent place 
    on each such building. The Notice shall also be posted in the 
    project office and in such other appropriate conspicuous places as 
    the commissioner deems appropriate for providing notice to all 
    tenants. Posting shall not be required if the commissioner in his or 
    her discretion finds that the act of posting is likely to lead to a 
    breach of the peace or may result in the increased risk of vandalism 
    or
    
    [[Page 48555]]
    
    damage to the property. Any such finding will be made in writing. 
    Entry on the premises by the commissioner for the purpose of posting 
    shall be privileged as against all other persons.
        (d) Service made under paragraphs (c) (1), (2), and (3) of this 
    section is deemed to have been made upon mailing, whether or not the 
    Notice was received and whether or not a return receipt is received 
    or the letter containing the Notice is returned.
        (e) When service of the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale 
    is made pursuant to paragraph (c) (1), (2), or (3) of this section, 
    the commissioner shall at the same time and in the same manner serve 
    a copy of the instrument by which the General Counsel, under section 
    5(b) of this Guide, has designated him or her to act as 
    commissioner.
        (f) At least 7 days before the foreclosure sale, the 
    commissioner will record both the instrument designating him or her 
    to act as commissioner and the Notice of Default and Foreclosure 
    Sale in the same office or offices in which the mortgage was 
    recorded.
    
    7. Conditions of Foreclosure Sale
    
        (a) If a majority of the residential units in a property subject 
    to foreclosure sale pursuant to the Act are occupied by residential 
    tenants either on the date of the foreclosure sale or on the date on 
    which the General Counsel designates the foreclosure commissioner, 
    the Secretary shall require, as a condition and term of the sale, 
    that the purchaser at a foreclosure sale (other than the Secretary) 
    agree to continue to operate the project in accordance with the 
    terms of the program under which the mortgage insurance or 
    assistance was provided, or any applicable regulatory or other 
    agreement in effect with respect to such property immediately prior 
    to the time of foreclosure sale as the Secretary shall find 
    appropriate. If a majority of the residential units are not so 
    occupied, at either such time, the Secretary, in his or her 
    discretion, may require as a condition and term of the sale, that 
    the purchaser (other than the Secretary) agree to continue to 
    operate the property in accordance with such terms described above 
    as the Secretary shall find appropriate.
        (b) Terms which the Secretary may find appropriate to require 
    pursuant to the Act and such other provisions of law as may be 
    applicable may include provisions relating to use and ownership of 
    the project property, tenant admission standards and procedures, 
    rent schedules and increases, and project operation and maintenance. 
    In determining terms which may be appropriate to require, the 
    Secretary shall consider:
        (1) The history of the project, including the purposes of the 
    program under which the mortgage insurance or assistance was 
    provided, and any other program of HUD under which the project was 
    developed or otherwise assisted and the probable causes of project 
    failure resulting in its default;
        (2) A financial analysis of the project, including an appraisal 
    of the fair market value of the property for its highest and best 
    use;
        (3) A physical analysis of the project, including the condition 
    of the structure and grounds, the need for rehabilitation or 
    repairs, and the estimated costs of any such rehabilitation or 
    repairs;
        (4) The income levels of the occupants of the project;
        (5) Characteristics, including rental levels, of comparable 
    housing in the area, with particular reference to whether current 
    conditions and discernible trends in the area fairly indicate a 
    likelihood that, for the foreseeable future after foreclosure and 
    sale, the project will continue to provide rental or cooperative 
    housing and market rentals obtainable in the project will be 
    affordable by low- or moderate-income persons;
        (6) The availability of or need for rental housing for low- and 
    moderate-income persons in the area, including actions being taken 
    or projected to be taken to address such needs and the impact of 
    such actions on the project;
        (7) An assessment of the number of occupants who might be 
    displaced as a result of the manner of disposition;
        (8) The eligibility of the occupants of the property for rental 
    assistance under any program administered by HUD and the 
    availability of funding for such assistance if necessary in order 
    that the units occupied by such occupants will remain available to 
    and affordable by such persons, or if necessary in order to assure 
    the financial feasibility of the project after foreclosure and sale 
    subject to the terms to be required by the Secretary; and
        (9) Such other factors relating to the project as the Secretary 
    shall consider appropriate.
        (c) Terms which the Secretary may require to be agreed to by the 
    purchaser pursuant to the Act shall generally not be more 
    restrictive, or binding for a longer duration, than the terms by 
    which the mortgagor was bound prior to the foreclosure. For example:
        (1) If the mortgage being foreclosed was previously insured by 
    the Secretary under section 608, or 801, or title II or X of the 
    National Housing Act; or assisted under section 202 of the Housing 
    Act of 1959, as it existed before its amendment by section 801 of 
    the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act, any terms 
    required by the Secretary pursuant to the Act shall be in effect no 
    longer than the earliest date on which the mortgagor could have 
    prepaid the mortgage debt without the Secretary's consent, or the 
    maturity date of the mortgage, whichever is earlier. No terms shall 
    be required pursuant to the Act if, under the terms of the mortgage, 
    the mortgagor could have prepaid the mortgage debt in full without 
    the Secretary's consent on or before the date of the foreclosure 
    sale.
        (2) If the mortgage being foreclosed was taken by the Secretary 
    in conjunction with the previous sale of the project by the 
    Secretary (purchase money mortgage), any terms required by the 
    Secretary pursuant to the Act shall be in effect no longer than the 
    earliest date on which the mortgagor under the Purchase Money 
    Mortgage could have prepaid the mortgage debt in full without the 
    Secretary's consent, or the maturity date of the mortgage, whichever 
    is earlier. No terms shall be required pursuant to the Act if the 
    mortgagor could have prepaid the mortgage debt in full without the 
    Secretary's consent on or before the date of the foreclosure sale.
        (3) If the mortgage being foreclosed covers a project which is 
    governed by a use agreement executed under section 1(d)(1) of the 
    Housing and Community Development Amendments of 1978, as amended (12 
    U.S.C. 1715z-1a); section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959, as amended 
    by section 801 of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing 
    Act (12 U.S.C. 1701q); section 811 of the Cranston-Gonzalez National 
    Affordable Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 8013); or section 225(b) of the 
    Emergency Low Income Housing Preservation Act of 1987 (12 U.S.C. 
    17151), any terms required by the Secretary under the Act shall be 
    in effect no longer than the maturity date of the mortgage.
        (4) If the mortgage being foreclosed was held by the Secretary 
    under section 312 of the Housing Act of 1964, any terms required by 
    the Secretary pursuant to the Act shall be in effect no longer than 
    five years after the completion of the rehabilitation work funded by 
    the section 312 loan. No terms shall be required pursuant to the Act 
    if the foreclosure sale occurs more than five years after the 
    completion of such rehabilitation work.
        (5) If the mortgage being foreclosed covers a project which is 
    governed by a use agreement executed under section 222(b) of the 
    Low-Income Housing Preservation and Resident Homeownership Act of 
    1990 (12 U.S.C. 4112), any terms required by the Secretary under the 
    Act shall be in effect for the remaining useful life of the project. 
    Remaining useful life has the same meaning given the term in Sec. 24 
    CFR 248.101.
        (d) The limitations contained in paragraph (c) of this section 
    apply only to such terms as the Secretary may require the purchaser 
    to agree to, as a condition and term of the sale, under paragraph 
    (a) of this section. Nothing contained in paragraph (c) of this 
    section shall prevent the Secretary and the purchaser from entering 
    into a subsidy agreement under any program administered by the 
    Secretary containing terms binding upon either party which are 
    longer in duration than would be permitted to be required by 
    paragraph (c) of this section.
        (e) Any terms required by the Secretary to be agreed to by the 
    purchaser as a condition and term of sale under the Act shall be 
    embodied in a use agreement to be executed by the Secretary and the 
    purchaser. Such terms also may be included, or referred to, in 
    appropriate covenants contained in the deed to be delivered by the 
    foreclosure commissioner as described in section 12 of this Guide. 
    Terms required by the Secretary shall be stated or described in the 
    Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale served, published and posted 
    in accordance with section 6 of this Guide.
    
    8. Termination or Adjournment of Foreclosure Sale
    
        (a) Except as provided in paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this 
    section, the commissioner shall withdraw the security property from 
    foreclosure and cancel the foreclosure sale only if:
        (1) The Secretary so directs the commissioner; or
        (2) The commissioner finds, upon application of the mortgagor at 
    least three
    
    [[Page 48556]]
    
    business days prior to the scheduled sale, that the default or 
    defaults upon which the foreclosure is based did not exist when the 
    Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale was served; or
        (3) (i) In the case of a monetary default, the entire amount of 
    principal and interest which would be due if payments under the 
    mortgage had not been accelerated is tendered to the commissioner 
    before the public auction is completed, and the commissioner finds 
    that there are no nonmonetary defaults;
        (ii) In the case of a nonmonetary default, the commissioner, 
    upon application of the mortgagor before the date of foreclosure 
    sale, finds that all nonmonetary defaults have been cured and that 
    there are no monetary defaults; and
        (iii) There is tendered to the commissioner before public 
    auction is completed, all amounts due under the mortgage agreement 
    excluding additional amounts which would have been due if mortgage 
    payments had been accelerated, all expenditures secured by the 
    mortgage, and all foreclosure costs incurred for which payment from 
    foreclosure proceeds is authorized, as described in section 10 of 
    this Guide.
        (b) Before withdrawing the security property from foreclosure as 
    described in paragraph (a) (2) or (3) of this section, the 
    commissioner shall notify the Secretary of the proposed withdrawal 
    by telephone or telegram and shall provide the Secretary with a 
    written statement of the reasons for the proposed withdrawal along 
    with all documents submitted by the mortgagor in support of the 
    proposed withdrawal. Upon receipt of this statement, the Secretary 
    shall have 10 days within which to demonstrate orally or in writing 
    why the security property should not be withdrawn from foreclosure. 
    The Secretary shall provide the mortgagor with a copy of any 
    statement prepared by the Secretary in opposition to the proposed 
    withdrawal at the same time the statement is submitted to the 
    commissioner. If the Secretary receives the commissioner's written 
    statement less than 10 days before the scheduled foreclosure sale, 
    the sale shall automatically be postponed for 14 days. Under these 
    circumstances, notice of the rescheduled sale shall be served as 
    described in paragraph (d) of this section.
        (c) The commissioner may not withdraw the security property from 
    foreclosure as described in paragraph (a)(3) of this section more 
    than once unless the Secretary consents in writing to such 
    withdrawal.
        (d) Before or at the time of sale, the foreclosure commissioner 
    may, in his or her discretion, determine that circumstances are not 
    conducive to a sale which is fair to the mortgagor and the 
    Secretary, or that additional time is necessary to determine if the 
    sale should be terminated as described in paragraph (a) (2) or (3) 
    of this section. If the commissioner makes such a determination, he 
    or she may adjourn the foreclosure to a later time on the scheduled 
    sale date or to a date not less than nine nor more than 24 days 
    later than the scheduled sale date. If the sale is adjourned to a 
    later hour on the scheduled sale date, no additional notice of the 
    sale is required. If the sale is adjourned to a later date, a 
    revised Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale reciting that the 
    sale has been adjourned to a specific new date and containing any 
    other corrections the commissioner deems appropriate shall be served 
    in accordance with the provisions of section 6.(c) of this Guide, 
    except that publication under section 6(c)(4) may be made on any of 
    three separate days prior to the revised date of foreclosure sale so 
    long as the first publication is made at least seven days before the 
    revised sale date, and mailing under section 6(c) (1) through (3) 
    may be made at any time at least seven days before the date to which 
    the foreclosure sale has been adjourned. The commissioner shall 
    also, in the case of a sale adjourned to a later date, mail a copy 
    of the revised Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale to the 
    Secretary at least seven days before the date to which the sale has 
    been adjourned.
        (e) If the General Counsel designates a substitute commissioner 
    less than 48 hours before the foreclosure sale, the sale shall be 
    terminated and a new foreclosure commenced by serving a new Notice 
    of Default and Foreclosure Sale, in accordance with section 6.(c) of 
    this Guide.
        (f) If the General Counsel designates a substitute commissioner 
    48 hours or more before the foreclosure sale, the foreclosure will 
    continue without prejudice unless the substitute commissioner in his 
    or her sole discretion finds that continuation of the foreclosure 
    sale will unfairly affect the interests of the mortgagor. If the 
    substitute commissioner makes such a finding, the substitute 
    commissioner shall cancel the sale or adjourn it according to the 
    provisions of paragraph (d) of this section.
        (g) If the commissioner cancels the foreclosure, the mortgage 
    will continue in effect as if the mortgage debt had not been 
    accelerated.
        (h) If the commissioner cancels the foreclosure sale, a new 
    foreclosure may be subsequently commenced as provided under the Act.
        (i) If upon application by the mortgagor, the commissioner 
    refuses to withdraw the property from foreclosure as described in 
    paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3)(ii) of this section, the commissioner 
    shall provide the mortgagor and the Secretary with a written 
    statement of the reasons for the refusal.
    
    9. Conduct of the Sale
    
        (a) The foreclosure commissioner shall conduct the foreclosure 
    sale at public auction in a manner fair to both the mortgagor and 
    the Secretary and consistent with the provisions of the Act. The 
    commissioner shall attend the foreclosure sale in person or, if the 
    Commissioner is not a natural person, through a duly authorized 
    employee. If more than one commissioner has been designated, at 
    least one shall attend the sale. The commissioner shall accept 
    written one-price sealed bids from any party including the Secretary 
    so long as those bids conform to the requirements described in the 
    Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale which are contained in 
    section 6.(b)(12) of this Guide. The commissioner shall announce the 
    name of each such bidder and the amount of the bid. The commissioner 
    shall accept oral bids from any party, including parties who 
    submitted one-price sealed bids, if those oral bids conform to the 
    requirements described in the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale 
    which are contained in section 6.(b)(12) of this Guide. The 
    commissioner will announce the amount of the high bid and the name 
    of the successful bidder before the close of the sale.
        (b) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (a) of this 
    section, neither the commissioner nor any relative, related business 
    entity or employee shall be permitted to bid at the foreclosure 
    sale. Relatives of the commissioner who may not bid include parents, 
    siblings, spouses and children. Related business entities which may 
    not bid include entities or concerns whose relationship with the 
    commissioner at the time the commissioner is designated is such 
    that, directly or indirectly, one concern or individual formulates, 
    directs, or controls the other concern; or has the power to 
    formulate, direct, or control the other concern; or has the 
    responsibility and authority either to prevent in the first 
    instance, or promptly to correct, the offensive conduct of the other 
    concern. Business concerns are also affiliates of each other when a 
    third party is similarly situated with respect to both concerns.
        (c) If a natural person, the commissioner may serve as 
    auctioneer or, in the commissioner's discretion, may employ an 
    auctioneer to conduct the sale. If the commissioner employs an 
    auctioneer to conduct the foreclosure sale, the auctioneer must be a 
    licensed auctioneer, an officer of State or local government, or any 
    other person who commonly conducts foreclosure sales in the area in 
    which the security property is located. The commissioner will 
    compensate any such auctioneer from the proceeds of the fee he or 
    she collects as described in section 10(e) of this Guide.
    
    10. Foreclosure Costs
    
        Before any claim may be satisfied from the sale proceeds, those 
    proceeds shall be used to pay the following costs:
        (a) Advertising and postage expenses incurred in serving the 
    Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale under section 6.(c) (1) 
    through (4) of this Guide;
        (b) Mileage by the most reasonable road distance for posting the 
    Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale under section 6.(c)(5) of 
    this Guide and for the foreclosure commissioner's attendance at the 
    sale. The mileage shall be paid at a rate provided in 28 U.S.C. 
    1921;
        (c) Reasonable and necessary costs incurred for title and lien 
    record searches;
        (d) The necessary out-of-pocket costs incurred by the 
    commissioner for recording documents; and
        (e) A commission to the foreclosure commissioner for the conduct 
    of the foreclosure in an amount to be determined by the General 
    Counsel. A commission may be allowed to the commissioner 
    notwithstanding termination of the sale or appointment of a 
    substitute commissioner before the sale takes place.
    
    11. Disposition of Sale Proceeds
    
        (a) The proceeds of the foreclosure sale shall be used in the 
    following order:
    
    [[Page 48557]]
    
        (1) To pay the costs listed in section 10 of this Guide;
        (2) To pay valid tax liens or assessments on the security 
    property which have priority over the foreclosed mortgage;
        (3) To pay liens recorded prior to the recording of the 
    foreclosed mortgage which are required to be paid in conformity with 
    the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale;
        (4) To pay service charges and advancements for taxes, 
    assessments and property insurance premiums which were made under 
    the terms of the foreclosed mortgage;
        (5) To pay the interest due under the mortgage debt;
        (6) To pay the unpaid principal balance secured by the mortgage 
    (including expenditures for the necessary protection, preservation 
    and repair of the security property as authorized under the mortgage 
    agreement and interest thereon if provided in the mortgage 
    agreement);
        (7) To pay any late charges;
        (8) To pay any liens recorded after the foreclosed mortgage; and
        (9) To pay the surplus to the mortgagor.
        (b) The priority of the Secretary's lien shall be determined by 
    the Federal first-in-time first-in-right rule. State laws affording 
    priority to liens recorded after the mortgage are preempted.
        (c) If the mortgagor entitled to the surplus cannot be located, 
    or if the surplus available is insufficient to pay all claimants and 
    the claimants to the surplus cannot agree on its disposition, or if 
    a claimant to the proceeds of the sale disagrees with the 
    commissioner's proposed disposition of the proceeds, the 
    commissioner may deposit the disputed funds with a legally 
    authorized official or court. If such a procedure for the deposit of 
    disputed funds is not available, and the foreclosure commissioner 
    files a bill of interpleader or is sued as a stakeholder to 
    determine entitlement to such funds, the foreclosure commissioner's 
    necessary costs in taking or defending such action shall be 
    deductible from the disputed funds.
        (d) If there is more than one party holding a lien or assessment 
    described in paragraph (a) (2), (3) or (8) of this section, the 
    claim of each party holding the same kind of lien or assessment will 
    be given the relative priority to which it would be entitled under 
    the law of the State in which the security property is located.
        (e) The commissioner will keep such records as will permit the 
    Secretary to verify the costs claimed under section 10 of this 
    Guide, and otherwise to audit the commissioner's disposition of the 
    sale proceeds.
    
    12. Transfer of Title and Possession
    
        (a) If the Secretary is the successful bidder, the foreclosure 
    commissioner shall issue a deed to the Secretary upon receipt of the 
    amount needed to pay the costs listed in section 11.(a) (1) through 
    (3) of this Guide. If the Secretary is not the successful bidder, 
    the foreclosure commissioner shall issue a deed to the purchaser 
    upon receipt of the entire purchase price and execution by the 
    Secretary and the purchaser of any use agreement referred to in 
    section 7(e) of this Guide. The deed shall convey all of the 
    Secretary's rights, title and interest in the security property as 
    well as the rights of the commissioner, the mortgagor, and any other 
    person claiming by, through, or under them. Any required covenants 
    reflecting terms described in section 7 of this Guide shall be 
    contained in the commissioner's deed. No judicial proceeding shall 
    be required ancillary or supplementary to the procedures provided in 
    this part to assure the validity of the conveyance or confirmation 
    of such conveyance.
        (b) The commissioner shall deliver possession of the security 
    property to the purchaser at the same time he or she delivers the 
    deed. The purchaser's possession of the security property shall be 
    subject to any interests senior to that of the mortgage and to the 
    terms of any existing residential lease for the remaining term of 
    the lease or for one year, whichever is shorter. Subject to any 
    required terms described in section 7 of this Guide, any commercial 
    tenant and any residential tenant remaining in possession after the 
    expiration of his or her lease or after the passage of one year, 
    whichever event occurs first, shall be deemed a tenant at sufferance 
    and may be evicted in accordance with applicable State or local law.
        (c) When the commissioner conveys the property to the Secretary, 
    no tax shall be imposed or collected with respect to the 
    commissioner's deed, whether as a tax upon the instrument itself or 
    upon the privilege of conveying or transferring title to the 
    property.
        (d) The registrar of deeds or other appropriate official in the 
    county where the property is located shall, upon tendering of the 
    customary recording fees, accept all instruments pertaining to the 
    foreclosure which are submitted by the commissioner for recordation. 
    The instruments to be accepted shall include, but not be limited to, 
    the commissioner's deed and the commissioner's affidavit, both of 
    which are described in section 14 of this Guide.
        (e) Failure to collect or pay a tax described in paragraph (c) 
    of this section shall not be grounds for refusing to record the 
    commissioner's deed, for failing to recognize such recordation or 
    for denying enforcement of the deed in any State or Federal court.
    
    13. Redemption Rights
    
        The mortgagor or others will have no right to redeem the 
    mortgage after the foreclosure sale. The mortgagor or others will 
    have no right to possession of the security property after the 
    foreclosure sale based on a right of redemption.
    
    14. Record of Foreclosure and Sale
    
        (a) The deed to the purchaser shall contain the following 
    recitals:
        (1) A statement that the foreclosed mortgage was held by the 
    Secretary;
        (2) The details of the service of the Notice of Default and 
    Foreclosure Sale described in section 6(c) of this Guide, including 
    the names and addresses of persons to whom the Notice was mailed and 
    the dates on which the Notice was mailed, names of newspapers in 
    which and dates on which the Notice was published, and the date on 
    which service by posting was accomplished;
        (3) A statement that the foreclosure was conducted in accordance 
    with the Act and with the terms of the Notice of Default and 
    Foreclosure Sale;
        (4) The costs of the foreclosure as described in section 10 of 
    this Guide; and
        (5) The name of the successful bidder and the amount of the 
    successful bid.
        (b) The commissioner may, in his or her discretion, make these 
    recitations in an affidavit or addendum to the deed rather than in 
    the body of the deed.
    
    15. Management and Disposition by the Secretary
    
        When the Secretary is the purchaser of the security property, 
    the Secretary shall manage and dispose of it in accordance with 
    section Sec. 203 of the Housing and Community Development Amendments 
    of 1978, 12 U.S.C. 1701z-11, and in accordance with 24 CFR part 290.
    
    16. Computation of Time
    
        Periods of time provided for in this Guide shall be calculated 
    in consecutive calendar days including the day or days on which the 
    actions or events occur or are to occur. Any such period of time 
    includes the day on which an event occurs or is to occur.
    
    Appendix B: Nonjudicial Foreclosure of Single Family Mortgages--
    Guide
    
    Sec.
    1. Purpose.
    2. Scope and applicability.
    3. Definitions.
    4. Designation of foreclosure commissioner.
    5. Prerequisites to foreclosure.
    6. Commencement of foreclosure.
    7. Notice of default and foreclosure sale.
    8. Service of notice of default and foreclosure sale.
    9. Presale reinstatement.
    10. Conduct of sale.
    11. Adjournment or cancellation of sale.
    12. Validity of sale.
    13. Foreclosure costs.
    14. Disposition of sale proceeds.
    15. Transfer of title and possession.
    16. Redemption rights.
    17. Record of foreclosure and sale.
    18. Effect of sale.
    19. Computation of time.
    20. Deficiency judgment.
    
    1. Purpose
    
        The purpose of this guide is to present, in a single document, 
    the statutory and regulatory requirements of the Single Family 
    Mortgage Foreclosure Act of 1994 (the Statute), 12 U.S.C. 
    Secs. 3751-3768. Although it presents the regulatory and statutory 
    requirements in a combined format, this guide is a secondary source 
    for these requirements. The Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), at 24 
    CFR part 27, subpart B, is the primary, governing source for 
    regulatory requirements, and the Statute is the primary, governing 
    source for statutory requirements. Any reference in this Guide to 
    the provisions of the Statute includes the requirements of 24 CFR 
    part 27, subpart B.
        The Statute creates a uniform Federal remedy for foreclosure of 
    certain single family mortgages which are held by the
    
    [[Page 48558]]
    
    Secretary of Housing and Urban Development pursuant to Title I of 
    the National Housing Act, 12 U.S.C. 1702 et seq., Title II of the 
    National Housing Act, 12 U.S.C. 1707 et seq., or Section 312 of the 
    Housing Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. 1452b (as it existed before repeal). 
    The Secretary's powers under the Statute to appoint a foreclosure 
    commissioner or commissioners and substitute commissioners, and to 
    fix the compensation of commissioners have been delegated to the HUD 
    General Counsel.
        The availability of uniform and more expeditious procedures, 
    with no right of redemption in the mortgagor or others, for the 
    foreclosure of these mortgages by the Department, will ameliorate 
    the negative consequences of the disparate State laws under which 
    mortgages covering one- to four-family residential properties are 
    foreclosed on behalf of HUD. The long periods of time that are 
    required under State law to complete foreclosure of such mortgages 
    lead to deterioration in the condition of the properties involved, 
    necessitate substantial Federal holding expenditures, increase the 
    risk of vandalism, fire loss, depreciation, damage, and waste with 
    respect to the properties, and adversely affect the neighborhoods in 
    which the properties are located. These consequences seriously 
    impair the ability of HUD to protect Federal financial interests in 
    the properties and frustrate attaining the objectives of the 
    underlying Federal program authority. Use of this nonjudicial 
    foreclosure procedure will also reduce unnecessary litigation, which 
    contributes to already overcrowded court calendars, by removing many 
    foreclosures from the courts.
    
    2. Scope and Applicability
    
        (a) Scope. Under the Statute, HUD may foreclose on any defaulted 
    single family mortgage (as defined in section 3, below) encumbering 
    real estate in any State regardless of when the mortgage was 
    executed.
        (b) Applicability. HUD, at its discretion, may use other 
    procedures to foreclose defaulted single family mortgages, including 
    judicial foreclosure in State or Federal Court, and nonjudicial 
    foreclosures under State law or any other Federal law.
    
    3. Definitions
    
        As used in this guide--
        Statute means the Single Family Mortgage Foreclosure Act of 
    1994.
        Bona fide purchaser means a purchaser for value in good faith 
    and without notice of any adverse claim, and who acquires the 
    security property free of any adverse claim.
        County means a political subdivision of a State or Territory of 
    the United States, created to aid in the administration of state law 
    for the purpose of local self-government, and includes a parish or 
    any other equivalent subdivision.
        Mortgage means a deed of trust, mortgage, deed to secure debt, 
    security agreement, or any other form of instrument under which any 
    property (real or mixed real and personal), or any interest in 
    property (including leaseholds, reversionary interests, and any 
    other estates under applicable State law), is conveyed in trust, 
    mortgaged, encumbered, pledged, or otherwise rendered subject to a 
    lien for the purpose of securing the payment of money or the 
    performance of an obligation.
        Mortgage agreement means the note or debt instrument and the 
    mortgage instrument, deed of trust instrument, trust deed, or any 
    other similar instrument or instruments creating the security 
    interest in the real estate for the repayment of the note or debt 
    instrument, including any instrument incorporated by reference 
    therein and any instrument or agreement amending or modifying any of 
    the foregoing.
        Mortgagor means the debtor, obligor, grantor, or trustor named 
    in the mortgage agreement and, unless the context otherwise 
    indicates, includes the current owner of record of the security 
    property whether or not such owner is personally liable on the 
    mortgage debt.
        Owner means any person who has an ownership interest in the 
    property and includes heirs, devisees, executors, administrators, 
    and other personal representatives, and trustees of testamentary 
    trusts if the owner of record is deceased.
        Person includes any individual, group of individuals, 
    association, partnership, corporation, or organization.
        Record; Recorded means to enter or entered in public land record 
    systems established under State statutes for the purpose of 
    imparting constructive notice to purchasers of real property for 
    value and without actual knowledge, and includes ``register'' and 
    ``registered'' in the instance of registered land, and ``file'' and 
    its variants in the context of entering documents in public land 
    records.
        Secretary means the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, 
    acting by and through any authorized designee exclusive of the 
    foreclosure commissioner.
        Security property means the property (real or mixed real and 
    personal) or an interest in property (including leaseholds, life 
    estates, reversionary interests, and any other estates under 
    applicable law), together with fixtures and other interests subject 
    to the lien of the mortgage under applicable law.
        Single family mortgage means a mortgage that covers property on 
    which there is located a 1- to 4- family residence, and that:
        (1) Is held by the Secretary pursuant to title I or title II of 
    the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.); or
        (2) Secures a loan obligated by the Secretary under section 312 
    of the Housing Act of 1964 as it existed before the repeal of that 
    section by section 289 of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable 
    Housing Act. A mortgage securing such a loan that covers property 
    containing nonresidential space and a 1- to 4-family dwelling is not 
    subject to foreclosure under the Statute.
        State means:
        (1) The several States;
        (2) The District of Columbia;
        (3) The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico;
        (4) The United States Virgin Islands;
        (5) Guam;
        (6) American Samoa;
        (7) The Northern Mariana Islands; and
        (8) Indian tribes, meaning any Tribe, band, group or nation, 
    including Alaskan Indians, Aleuts, and Eskimos, and any Alaskan 
    Native Village of the United States that is considered an eligible 
    recipient under Title I of the Indian Self-Determination and 
    Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 450) or was considered an 
    eligible recipient under the State and Local Fiscal Assistance Act 
    of 1972 (31 U.S.C. 1221) before repeal of that Act. Eligible 
    recipients under the Indian Self-Determination and Education 
    Assistance Act are determined by the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
    
    4. Designation of Foreclosure Commissioner
    
        (a) The Secretary may designate a person or persons to serve as 
    a foreclosure commissioner for the purpose of foreclosing single 
    family mortgages, and such a foreclosure commissioner has a 
    nonjudicial power of sale as provided under the Statute.
        (b) The foreclosure commissioner, if a natural person, must be a 
    resident of the State in which the security property is located and, 
    if not a natural person, the foreclosure commissioner must be duly 
    authorized to transact business under laws of the State in which the 
    security property is located. No person shall be designated as a 
    foreclosure commissioner unless that person is determined by the 
    Secretary to be responsible, financially sound, and competent to 
    conduct a foreclosure. The method of selection and determination of 
    the qualifications of the foreclosure commissioner are at the 
    discretion of the Secretary, and the execution of a designation 
    pursuant to the Statute is conclusive evidence that the commissioner 
    selected has been determined to be qualified by the Secretary.
        (c) The Secretary designates a foreclosure commissioner by 
    executing a written designation stating the name and business or 
    residential address of the commissioner, except that if a person is 
    designated in his or her capacity as an official or employee of a 
    government or corporate entity, such a person may be designated by 
    his or her unique title or position instead of by name. The 
    designation is effective upon execution.
        (d) The Secretary may designate, with or without cause, a 
    substitute foreclosure commissioner to replace a previously 
    designated foreclosure commissioner, by the procedure contained in 
    paragraph (c) of this section, above.
        (1) A substitution of the foreclosure commissioner may be made 
    at any time prior to the time of the foreclosure sale, and the 
    foreclosure shall continue without prejudice, unless the substitute 
    commissioner, in that commissioner's sole discretion, finds that 
    continuation of the foreclosure sale will unfairly affect the 
    interests of the mortgagor. Any such finding must be in writing. If 
    the substitute commissioner makes such a finding, the substitute 
    commissioner will cancel the foreclosure sale, or adjourn the sale 
    as explained in section 11, below.
        (2) If a substitute commissioner is designated, a copy of the 
    written notice of the designation referred to in paragraph (c) of 
    this section must be served:
        (i) By mail, as described in section 8, below (except that the 
    minimum time periods between mailing and the date of the foreclosure 
    sale do not apply); or
    
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        (ii) In any other manner which, in the substitute foreclosure 
    commissioner's sole discretion, is conducive to achieving timely 
    notice of such substitution.
    
    5. Prerequisites to Foreclosure
    
        (a) The Secretary may commence foreclosure of a single family 
    mortgage under the Statute upon the breach of a covenant or 
    condition in the mortgage agreement.
        (b) No foreclosure under the Statute may be commenced unless any 
    previously pending judicial or nonjudicial proceeding that has been 
    separately instituted by the Secretary to foreclose the mortgage in 
    a manner other than under the Statute has been withdrawn, dismissed, 
    or otherwise terminated.
        (c) The Secretary will not institute any separate foreclosure 
    proceeding concerning a property while it is the subject of a 
    foreclosure pursuant to the Statute.
        (d) The Statute does not preclude the Secretary from enforcing 
    any right, other than foreclosure, under applicable Federal or State 
    law, including any right to obtain a monetary judgment, or 
    foreclosing under the Statute if the Secretary has obtained or is 
    seeking any other remedy available pursuant to Federal or State law, 
    or under the mortgage agreement.
    
    6. Commencement of Foreclosure
    
        If the Secretary determines that the prerequisites to 
    foreclosure set forth in section 5 are satisfied, the Secretary may 
    direct the foreclosure commissioner to commence foreclosure of the 
    mortgage. Upon such request, the foreclosure commissioner will 
    commence foreclosure of the mortgage in accordance with section 7, 
    below.
    
    7. Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale
    
        The commissioner commences the foreclosure by serving a Notice 
    of Default and Foreclosure Sale. The Notice sets forth the name, 
    address and telephone number of the foreclosure commissioner and the 
    date on which the Notice was issued, along with the following 
    information:
        (a) The current mortgagee (that is, the Secretary), the original 
    mortgagee (if other than the Secretary), and the original mortgagor.
        (b) A description of the security property sufficient to 
    identify the property to be sold.
        (c) The date of the mortgage, the date the mortgage was 
    recorded, the office in which the mortgage is recorded, and the 
    liber and folio numbers or other appropriate description of the 
    location of recordation of the mortgage.
        (d) Identification of the failure to make payment, including the 
    entire amount delinquent as of a date specified, a statement 
    generally describing the other costs that must be paid if the 
    mortgage is to be reinstated, the due date of the earliest principal 
    installment payment remaining wholly unpaid as of the date on which 
    the Notice is issued upon which the foreclosure is based, or a 
    description of any other default or defaults upon which foreclosure 
    is based, and the acceleration of the secured indebtedness.
        (e) The date, time, and location of the foreclosure sale.
        (f) A statement that the foreclosure is being conducted in 
    accordance with the Statute.
        (g) A description of the types of costs, if any, to be paid by 
    the purchaser upon transfer of title.
        (h) The bidding and payment requirements for the foreclosure 
    sale, including the amount and method of deposit to be required at 
    the foreclosure sale, and the time and method of payment of the 
    balance of the foreclosure purchase price. The Notice must state 
    that all deposits and the balance of the purchase price must be paid 
    by certified or cashier's check. The Notice must also state that no 
    deposit will be required of the Secretary when the Secretary bids at 
    the foreclosure sale.
        (i) Any other appropriate terms of sale or information as the 
    Secretary may determine.
    
    8. Service of Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale
    
        The foreclosure commissioner will serve the Notice of Default 
    and Foreclosure Sale upon the following persons and in the following 
    manner, and no additional notice will be required to be served, 
    notwithstanding any notice requirements of any State or local law:
        (a) Filing the notice. The Notice of Default and Foreclosure 
    Sale must be filed not less than 21 days before the date of the 
    foreclosure sale in the manner authorized for filing a notice of an 
    action concerning real property according to the law of the State in 
    which the security property is located, or if none, in the manner 
    authorized by Section 3201 of title 28, United States Code.
        (b) Notice by mail.
        (1) The Notice must be sent by certified or registered mail, 
    postage prepaid, return receipt requested, to the following (except 
    that multiple mailings are not required to be sent to any party with 
    multiple capacities, e.g., an original mortgagor who is the security 
    property owner and lives in one of the units):
        (i) The current security property owner of record, as the record 
    existed 45 days before the date originally set for the foreclosure 
    sale, whether or not the notice describes a sale adjourned as 
    provided in the Statute. The Notice must be mailed not less than 21 
    days before the date of the foreclosure sale to the current owner at 
    the last address known to the Secretary or the foreclosure 
    commissioner or, if none, to the address of the security property, 
    or, at the discretion of the foreclosure commissioner, to any other 
    address believed to be that of the current owner.
        (ii) The original mortgagor and all subsequent mortgagors of 
    record or other persons who appear on the basis of the record to be 
    liable for part or all of the mortgage debt, as the record existed 
    45 days before the date originally set for the foreclosure sale, 
    whether or not the notice describes a sale adjourned as provided in 
    the Statute, except that the Notice need not be mailed to any 
    mortgagors who have been released from all obligations under the 
    mortgage. Notice under this subsection must be mailed not less than 
    21 days before the date of the foreclosure sale to the last known 
    address of the mortgagors or, if none, to the address of the 
    security property, or, at the discretion of the foreclosure 
    commissioner, to any other address believed to be that of such 
    mortgagors.
        (iii) All dwelling units in the security property, whether or 
    not the Notice describes a sale adjourned as provided in this part. 
    Notice under this subsection shall be mailed not less than 21 days 
    before the date of the foreclosure sale. If the names of the 
    occupants of the security property are not known to the Secretary, 
    or if the security property has more than one dwelling, the Notice 
    must be posted at the security property not less than 21 days before 
    the foreclosure sale.
        (iv) All persons holding liens of record upon the security 
    property, as the record existed 45 days before the date originally 
    set for the foreclosure sale, whether or not the notice describes a 
    sale adjourned as provided in the Statute. Notice under this 
    subsection must be mailed not less than 21 days before the date of 
    the foreclosure sale to each such lienholder's address of record, 
    or, at the discretion of the foreclosure commissioner, to any other 
    address believed to be that of such lienholder.
        (2) Notice by mail is deemed duly given upon mailing, whether or 
    not received by the addressee and whether or not a return receipt is 
    received or the notice is returned. The date of the receipt for the 
    postage paid for the mailing may serve as proof of the date of 
    mailing of the notice.
        (c) Publication.
        (1) A copy of the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale must be 
    published once a week during three successive calendar weeks before 
    the date of the foreclosure sale. Such publication must be in a 
    newspaper or newspapers having general circulation in the county or 
    counties in which the security property being sold is located. A 
    legal newspaper that is accepted as a newspaper of legal record in 
    the county or counties in which the security property being sold is 
    located is a newspaper having general circulation for the purposes 
    of this paragraph.
        (2) If there is no newspaper of general circulation published at 
    least weekly in the county or counties in which the security 
    property being sold is located, copies of the Notice of Default and 
    Foreclosure Sale must be posted, not less than 21 days before the 
    date of the foreclosure sale, at the courthouse of any county or 
    counties in which the security property is located and at the place 
    where the sale is to be held.
    
    9. Presale Reinstatement
    
        (a) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of section 4 (above), 
    paragraph (b) of this section, and section 11 (below), the 
    foreclosure commissioner will withdraw the security property from 
    foreclosure and cancel the foreclosure sale only if:
        (1) The Secretary directs the foreclosure commissioner to do so 
    before or at the time of the sale; or
        (2) The foreclosure commissioner finds, upon application of the 
    mortgagor not less than three business days before the date of the 
    sale, that the default or defaults upon which the foreclosure is 
    based did not exist at the time of service of the Notice of Default 
    and Foreclosure Sale; or
        (3) In the case of a foreclosure involving a monetary default, 
    there is tendered to the
    
    [[Page 48560]]
    
    foreclosure commissioner before public auction is completed all 
    amounts that would be due under the mortgage agreement if payments 
    under the mortgage had not been accelerated, all costs of 
    foreclosure incurred for which payment from the proceeds of 
    foreclosure is provided in section 13 (below), and the foreclosure 
    commissioner finds that there are no nonmonetary defaults; provided, 
    however, that the Secretary may refuse to cancel a foreclosure sale 
    pursuant to this subparagraph if the current mortgagor or owner of 
    record has, on one or more previous occasions, caused a foreclosure 
    of the mortgage, commenced pursuant to the Statute or otherwise, to 
    be canceled by curing a default; or
        (4) In the case of a foreclosure involving a nonmonetary 
    default:
        (i) The foreclosure commissioner, upon application of the 
    mortgagor before the date of foreclosure sale, finds that all 
    nonmonetary defaults are cured and that there are no monetary 
    defaults; and
        (ii) There is tendered to the foreclosure commissioner before 
    public auction is completed all amounts due under the mortgage 
    agreement (excluding all amounts which would be due under the 
    mortgage agreement if the mortgage payments had been accelerated), 
    including all amounts of expenditures secured by the mortgage and 
    all costs of foreclosure incurred for which payment would be made 
    from the proceeds of foreclosure.
        (b) Before withdrawing the security property from foreclosure 
    under subparagraphs (a)(2), (a)(3), or (a)(4) of this section, the 
    foreclosure commissioner must notify the Secretary of the proposed 
    withdrawal by telephone or other telecommunication device and must 
    also provide the Secretary with a written statement of the reasons 
    for the proposed withdrawal along with all documents submitted by 
    the mortgagor in support of the proposed withdrawal. Upon receipt of 
    this statement, the Secretary has ten (10) days in which to 
    demonstrate why the security property should not be withdrawn from 
    foreclosure, and if the Secretary makes this demonstration, the 
    property will not be withdrawn from foreclosure. The Secretary will 
    provide the mortgagor with a copy of any statement prepared by the 
    Secretary in opposition to the proposed withdrawal at the same time 
    the statement is submitted to the foreclosure commissioner. If the 
    Secretary receives the foreclosure commissioner's written statement 
    less than 10 days before the scheduled foreclosure sale, the sale 
    will automatically be adjourned for 14 days, during which time it 
    may also be cancelled. Under these circumstances, notice of the 
    rescheduled sale, if any, will be served as described in section 
    11(c), below.
        (c) If the foreclosure commissioner cancels the foreclosure, the 
    mortgage will continue in effect as though acceleration had not 
    occurred.
        (d) Cancellation of a foreclosure sale will have no effect on 
    the commencement of a subsequent foreclosure proceeding.
        (e) The foreclosure commissioner must file a notice of 
    cancellation in the same place and manner provided for filing the 
    Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale as provided in section 8.
    
    10. Conduct of Sale
    
        (a) The foreclosure sale will be conducted in a manner and at a 
    time and place as identified in the Notice of Foreclosure and Sale 
    and more fully described in this section. The sale will be scheduled 
    for a date 30 or more days after the due date of the earliest unpaid 
    installment as described in section 7(d), above, or the earliest 
    occurrence of a nonmonetary default. The sale will be held at public 
    auction and must be scheduled to begin at a time between the hours 
    of 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. local time. The sale will be scheduled 
    for a place where foreclosure real estate auctions are customarily 
    held in the county or counties in which the property to be sold is 
    located, or at a courthouse therein, or at or on the property to be 
    sold. If the security property is situated in two counties, the sale 
    may be held in any one of the counties in which any part of the 
    security property is situated.
        (b) The foreclosure commissioner will conduct the foreclosure 
    sale in a manner that is fair to both the mortgagor and the 
    Secretary (see section 12, below) and consistent with the provisions 
    of the Statute.
        (c) In addition to bids made in person at the sale, the 
    foreclosure commissioner will accept written one-price sealed bids 
    from any party, including the Secretary, for entry by announcement 
    at the sale so long as those bids conform to the requirements 
    described in the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale. The 
    foreclosure commissioner will announce the name of each bidder and 
    the amount of the bid. The commissioner will accept oral bids from 
    any party, including parties who submitted one-price sealed bids, if 
    those oral bids conform to the requirements in the Notice of Default 
    and Foreclosure Sale. Before the close of the sale, the commissioner 
    will announce the amount of the high bid and the name of the 
    successful bidder.
        (d) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (d) of this 
    section, neither the foreclosure commissioner nor any relative, 
    related business entity, or employee is permitted to bid in any 
    manner on the security property subject to the foreclosure sale, 
    except that the foreclosure commissioner or an auctioneer may be 
    directed by the Secretary to enter a bid on the Secretary's behalf. 
    Relatives of the foreclosure commissioner who may not bid include 
    parents, siblings, spouses and children. A related business entity 
    that may not bid or whose employees may not bid is one whose 
    relationship (at the time the foreclosure commissioner is designated 
    and during the term of service as foreclosure commissioner) with the 
    entity of the foreclosure commissioner is such that, directly or 
    indirectly, one entity formulates, directs, or controls the other 
    entity; or has the power to formulate, direct, or control the other 
    entity; or has the responsibility and authority to prevent, or 
    promptly to correct, the offensive conduct of the other entity.
        (e) The commissioner may serve as an auctioneer, or the 
    commissioner may employ an auctioneer to conduct the sale. If the 
    commissioner employs an auctioneer to conduct the foreclosure sale, 
    the auctioneer must be a licensed auctioneer, an officer of State or 
    local government, or any other person who commonly conducts 
    foreclosure sales in the area in which the security property is 
    located. The commissioner will compensate an auctioneer from the 
    proceeds of the commission described in section 13(e), below.
        (f) The foreclosure commissioner may require a bidder to make a 
    deposit in an amount or percentage set by the foreclosure 
    commissioner and stated in the Notice of Default and Foreclosure 
    Sale before the bid is accepted.
        (g) A successful bidder at the foreclosure sale who fails to 
    comply with the terms of the sale may be required to forfeit the 
    cash deposit or, at the election of the foreclosure commissioner 
    after consultation with the Secretary, will be liable to the 
    Secretary for any costs incurred as a result of such failure. If the 
    successful bidder fails to comply with the terms of the sale, the 
    HUD Field Office representative will provide instructions to the 
    commissioner about offering the property to the second highest 
    bidder, or having a new sale, or other instruction at the discretion 
    of the HUD representative.
    
    11. Adjournment or Cancellation of Sale
    
        (a) The foreclosure commissioner may, before or at the time of 
    the foreclosure sale, adjourn or cancel the foreclosure sale if the 
    foreclosure commissioner determines, in the foreclosure 
    commissioner's discretion, that:
        (1) Circumstances are not conducive to a sale which is fair to 
    the mortgagor and the Secretary, or
        (2) Additional time is necessary to determine whether the 
    security property should be withdrawn from foreclosure, as provided 
    in section 9, above.
        (b) The foreclosure commissioner may adjourn a foreclosure sale 
    to a later hour the same day by announcing or posting, at the 
    original place of sale, the new time and place of the foreclosure 
    sale, which must be held between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. at the 
    original place of sale.
        (c) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, the 
    foreclosure commissioner may adjourn a foreclosure sale for not less 
    than 9 and not more than 31 days, in which case the foreclosure 
    commissioner must serve a Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale 
    that is revised to state that the foreclosure sale has been 
    adjourned to a specified date between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 
    4:00 p.m. The revised Notice may include any other information the 
    foreclosure commissioner deems appropriate. Such Notice must be 
    served by publication and mailing as provided in section 8, above, 
    except that publication may be made on any of three separate days 
    before the revised date of foreclosure sale. If there is no 
    newspaper of general circulation that would permit publication on 
    any of three separate days before the revised date of foreclosure 
    sale, the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale must be posted, not 
    less than nine days before the date to which the sale has been 
    adjourned, at the courthouse of any county or counties in which the 
    property is located, and at the place where the sale is to be held. 
    The
    
    [[Page 48561]]
    
    commissioner must also, in the case of a sale adjourned to a later 
    date, mail a copy of the revised Notice of Default and Foreclosure 
    Sale to the Secretary at least seven days before the date to which 
    the sale has been adjourned.
        (d) When a substitute commissioner is designated by the 
    Secretary to replace a previously designated foreclosure 
    commissioner, the sale shall continue without prejudice unless the 
    substitute commissioner finds, in that commissioner's sole 
    discretion, that continuation of the foreclosure sale will unfairly 
    affect the interests of the mortgagor. Any such finding shall be in 
    writing. If the substitute commissioner makes such a finding, the 
    substitute commissioner shall cancel or adjourn the sale.
    
    12. Validity of Sale
    
        Any foreclosure sale held in accordance with the Statute and its 
    regulations is conclusively presumed to have been conducted in a 
    fair, legal, and reasonable manner. The sale price is conclusively 
    presumed to be reasonable and equal to the fair market value of the 
    property.
    
    13. Foreclosure Costs
    
        The following foreclosure costs are paid from the sale proceeds, 
    or from other available sources if sales proceeds are insufficient, 
    before satisfaction of any other claim to the sale proceeds:
        (a) Advertising costs and postage expenses incurred in giving 
    notice described in sections 8 and 11, above.
        (b) Mileage by the most reasonable road distance for posting 
    notices described in section 8, above, and for the foreclosure 
    commissioner's or auctioneer's attendance at the sale. The mileage 
    is paid at the rate provided in 28 U.S.C. 1821.
        (c) Reasonable and customary costs incurred for title and lien 
    record searches.
        (d) The necessary out-of-pocket costs incurred by the 
    foreclosure commissioner for recording documents.
        (e) A commission for the foreclosure commissioner (if the 
    foreclosure commissioner is not an employee of the United States) 
    for the conduct of the foreclosure in an amount to be determined by 
    the Secretary. A commission may be allowed to the foreclosure 
    commissioner notwithstanding termination of the sale or appointment 
    of a substitute commissioner before the sale takes place.
    
    14. Disposition of Sale Proceeds
    
        (a) The proceeds of the foreclosure sale are paid out in the 
    following order:
        (1) To cover the costs of foreclosure described in section 13, 
    above.
        (2) To pay valid tax liens or assessments on the security 
    property as provided in the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale.
        (3) To pay any liens recorded before the recording of the 
    foreclosed mortgage which are required to be paid in conformity with 
    the Notice of Default and Foreclosure Sale.
        (4) To pay service charges and advances for taxes, assessments, 
    and property insurance premiums which were made under the terms of 
    the foreclosed mortgage.
        (5) To pay the interest due under the mortgage debt.
        (6) To pay the unpaid principal balance secured by the mortgage 
    (including expenditures for the necessary protection, preservation, 
    and repair of the security property as authorized under the mortgage 
    agreement and interest thereon if provided in the mortgage 
    agreement).
        (7) To pay any late charges or fees.
        (b) Any surplus proceeds from a foreclosure sale will be 
    applied, after payment of the items described in paragraph (a) of 
    this section, in the order as follows:
        (1) To pay any liens recorded after the foreclosed mortgage in 
    the order of priority under the law of the State in which the 
    security property is located.
        (2) To pay the surplus to the mortgagor.
        (c) If the person to whom surplus proceeds are to be paid cannot 
    be located, or if the surplus available is insufficient to pay all 
    claimants and the claimants cannot agree on the allocation of the 
    surplus, or if any person claiming an interest in the mortgage 
    proceeds disagrees with the foreclosure commissioner's proposed 
    disposition of the disputed proceeds, the foreclosure commissioner 
    may deposit the disputed funds with a legally authorized official or 
    court. If a procedure for the deposit of disputed funds is not 
    available, and the foreclosure commissioner files a bill of 
    interpleader or is sued as a stakeholder to determine entitlement to 
    such funds, the foreclosure commissioner's necessary costs in taking 
    or defending such action are deductible from the disputed funds.
        (d) The foreclosure commissioner will keep such records as will 
    permit the Secretary to verify the costs claimed, and otherwise to 
    enable the Secretary to audit the foreclosure commissioner's 
    disposition of the sale proceeds.
    
    15. Transfer of Title and Possession
    
        (a) If the Secretary is the successful bidder, the foreclosure 
    commissioner will issue a deed to the Secretary upon receipt of the 
    amount needed to pay the costs of tax liens and prior liens. See 
    sections 14(a)(2) and (a)(3), above.
        (b) If the Secretary is not the successful bidder, the 
    foreclosure commissioner will issue a deed to the purchaser or 
    purchasers upon receipt of the entire purchase price in accordance 
    with the terms of the sale as provided in the Notice of Default and 
    Foreclosure Sale.
        (c) The deed or deeds issued by the foreclosure commissioner 
    shall be without warranty or covenants to the purchaser or 
    purchasers. Notwithstanding any State law to the contrary, delivery 
    of a deed by the foreclosure commissioner is a conveyance of the 
    property and constitutes passage of good and marketable title to the 
    mortgaged property. No judicial proceedings are required ancillary 
    or supplementary to the procedures provided under the Statute and 
    its regulations to assure the validity of the conveyance or 
    confirmation of such conveyance. The purchaser of property under the 
    Statute is presumed to be a bona fide purchaser.
        (d) A purchaser at a foreclosure sale held pursuant to the 
    Statute is entitled to possession upon passage of title under 
    paragraph (c) of this section, subject to any interest or interests 
    that are not barred, as described in section 18, below. Any person 
    remaining in possession of the property after the passage of title 
    is deemed a tenant at sufferance subject to eviction under 
    applicable law.
        (e) If a purchaser dies before execution and delivery of the 
    deed conveying the property to the purchaser, the foreclosure 
    commissioner will execute and deliver the deed to a legal 
    representative of the decedent purchaser's estate upon payment of 
    the purchase price in accordance with the terms of sale. Such 
    delivery to the representative of the purchaser's estate will have 
    the same effect as if accomplished during the lifetime of the 
    purchaser.
        (f) When the foreclosure commissioner conveys the property to 
    the Secretary, no tax may be imposed or collected with respect to 
    the foreclosure commissioner's deed, including any tax customarily 
    imposed upon the deed instrument or upon the conveyance or transfer 
    of title to the property.
        (g) The register of deeds or other appropriate official in the 
    county where the property is located must, upon tendering of the 
    customary recording fees, accept all instruments pertaining to the 
    foreclosure which are submitted by the foreclosure commissioner for 
    recordation. The instruments to be accepted include, but are not 
    limited to, the foreclosure commissioner's deed. If the foreclosure 
    commissioner elects to include the recitations described in section 
    17(a), below, in an affidavit or an addendum to the deed as 
    described in section 17(b), below, the affidavit or addendum must be 
    accepted for recordation. Failure to collect or pay a tax as 
    described in paragraph (f) of this section are not grounds for 
    refusing to record such instruments, for failing to recognize such 
    recordation as imparting notice, or for denying the enforcement of 
    such instruments and their provisions in any State or Federal Court.
        (h) The Clerk of the Court or other appropriate official must 
    cancel all liens as requested by the foreclosure commissioner.
    
    16. Redemption Rights
    
        (a) There is no right of redemption, or right of possession 
    based upon a right of redemption, in the mortgagor or others 
    subsequent to a foreclosure completed pursuant to the Statute. In 
    regard to the pre-emption of State laws regarding rights of 
    redemption, a foreclosure is considered completed upon the date and 
    at the time of the foreclosure sale.
        (b) Section 204(l) of the National Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. 
    1710(l), and section 701 of the Department of Housing and Urban 
    Development Reform Act of 1989, 42 U.S.C. 1452c, do not apply to 
    mortgages foreclosed under the Statute.
    
    17. Record of Foreclosure and Sale
    
        (a) The foreclosure commissioner must include in the recitals of 
    the deed to the purchaser, or in an affidavit or addendum to the 
    deed, the following items:
        (1) The date, time, and place of the foreclosure sale.
    
    [[Page 48562]]
    
        (2) A statement that the foreclosed mortgage was held by the 
    Secretary.
        (3) The date of the foreclosed mortgage, the date of the 
    recording of the mortgage that was foreclosed, the office in which 
    the mortgage was recorded, and the liber and folio numbers or other 
    appropriate description of the recordation of the mortgage.
        (4) The details of the service of the Notice of Default and 
    Foreclosure Sale, including the names and addresses of the persons 
    to whom the Notice was mailed and the date on which the Notice was 
    mailed, the name of the newspaper in which the Notice was published 
    and the dates of publication, and the date on which service by 
    posting, if required, was accomplished.
        (5) The date and place of filing the Notice of Default and 
    Foreclosure Sale.
        (6) A statement that the foreclosure was conducted in accordance 
    with the provisions of the Statute and with the terms of the Notice 
    of Default and Foreclosure Sale.
        (7) The name of the successful bidder and the amount of the 
    successful bid.
        (b) The foreclosure commissioner may, in his or her discretion, 
    make the recitations in paragraph (a) of this section in the deed or 
    in an affidavit or addendum to the deed, either of which is to be 
    recorded with the deed as provided in the Statute.
        (c) The items set forth in paragraph (a) of this section are 
    prima facie evidence of the truth of such facts in any Federal or 
    State court and evidence a conclusive presumption in favor of bona 
    fide purchasers and encumbrancers for value without notice. 
    Encumbrancers for value include liens placed by lenders who provide 
    the purchaser with purchase money in exchange for a security 
    interest in the newly-conveyed property.
    
    18. Effect of Sale
    
        A sale made and conducted as prescribed in the Statute to a bona 
    fide purchaser bars all claims upon, or with respect to, the 
    property sold for the following persons:
        (a) Any person to whom the Notice of Default and Foreclosure 
    Sale was mailed as provided under the Statute, and the heir, 
    devisee, executor, administrator, successor or assignee claiming 
    under any such person.
        (b) Any person claiming any interest in the property subordinate 
    to that of the mortgage if such person had actual knowledge of the 
    foreclosure sale.
        (c) Any person claiming any interest in the property whose 
    assignment, mortgage, or other conveyance was not duly recorded or 
    filed in the proper place for recording or filing, or whose judgment 
    or decree was not duly docketed or filed in the proper place for 
    docketing or filing, before the date on which the notice of the 
    foreclosure sale was first served by publication, as described in 
    section 8(c), above, and the executor, administrator, or assignee of 
    such a person.
        (d) Any person claiming an interest in the property under a 
    statutory lien or encumbrance created subsequent to the recording or 
    filing of the mortgage being foreclosed, and attaching to the title 
    or interest of any person designated in any of the foregoing 
    paragraphs.
    
    19. Computation of Time
    
        Periods of time provided for in the Statute are calculated in 
    consecutive calendar days including the day or days on which the 
    actions or events occur, or are to occur. Any such period of time 
    includes the day on which an event occurs or is to occur.
    
    20. Deficiency Judgment
    
        If the price at which the security property is sold at the 
    foreclosure sale is less than the unpaid balance of the debt secured 
    by such property after deducting payments in the order described in 
    section 14, above, the Secretary may refer the matter to the 
    Attorney General who may commence an action or actions against any 
    and all debtors to recover the deficiency, the only limitation on 
    such action being a prohibition against pursuit of a deficiency that 
    is specifically set forth in the mortgage.
    
    [FR Doc. 96-23258 Filed 9-12-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4210-32-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
10/15/1996
Published:
09/13/1996
Department:
Housing and Urban Development Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
96-23258
Dates:
October 15, 1996.
Pages:
48546-48562 (17 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. FR-4110-F-01
RINs:
2501-AC29
PDF File:
96-23258.pdf
CFR: (30)
24 CFR 27.20(c)
24 CFR 27.20(e)
24 CFR 27.1
24 CFR 27.2
24 CFR 27.3
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