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Send a public records request to the Office of the Assessor-Recorder in the county or city in which you reside. This office maintains public property records, and will have access to all publicly available foreclosure documents.
In California, lenders can foreclose on deeds of trust or mortgages using a nonjudicial foreclosure process (outside of court) or a judicial foreclosure process (through the courts).
When Can a California Foreclosure Start? Under federal law, the servicer usually can't officially begin a foreclosure until you're more than 120 days past due on payments, subject to a few exceptions. (12 C.F.R. § 1024.41 (2024).)
The Foreclosure Reduction Act reforms California's non-judicial foreclosure process so that borrowers have greater protection from wrongful foreclosures, and a meaningful opportunity to be considered for, and obtain, a loan modification or other alternative to foreclosure.
There are two answers, each equally true: California statutes tell us the minimum time for an unpaid lender to foreclose: about 4 months, from start to sale. In practice, it's far longer. Since the mortgage meltdown in 2008, lenders very seldom move a foreclosure as fast as the law allows.
If you live in the City of Los Angeles, renters in good standing cannot be evicted because of a foreclosure. (See details below.) If you live anywhere else in California, renters get until the end of their lease, or at least 90 days, to move out in a foreclosure.
California's new foreclosure laws emphasize homeowners' rights and aim to reduce the stress associated with foreclosure. Some of the most impactful changes include: Enhanced Notification: Lenders must give more straightforward notices with specific timelines, allowing titleholders to understand their options.
In fact most Responses to complaints are formal pleadings. You can go to the clerk of the court and examine files that have answers in them if you wish to see the format. If you send a letter, simply explain to the court what you are requesting from the bank in order to try to keep your home.
After You Get Formal Notice of the Foreclosure Even if you don't contest the foreclosure action, the sale usually won't occur until around a month after the judge issues a foreclosure order. So you'll probably have a couple of months from the first notice of the case to the date the court orders the sale.