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.
You have the right to redeem the home at any time after the sale, up until the sale is confirmed. (Ohio Rev. Code § 2329.33). After the sheriff's sale, the sheriff has up to 60 days to inform the court that the sale took place.
The statement is provided by the mortgage servicer and can be requested at any time. Accurate payoff information is crucial for managing financial decisions related to property ownership.
Under federal law, the servicer must generally send you a payoff statement within seven business days of your request, subject to a few exceptions. (12 C.F.R. § 1026.36.)
Under New Hampshire law, the borrower typically receives just one warning about the foreclosure sale: a notice of sale. The lender has to personally serve the notice of sale to the borrower or mail it at least 45 days before the sale and publish it in a newspaper once a week for three weeks before the sale. (N.H. Rev.
Under federal law, the servicer must generally send you a payoff statement within seven business days of your request, subject to a few exceptions. (12 C.F.R. § 1026.36.)
This is basically a document telling you that the lender will foreclose on your property if you do not take action to stop it. Ignoring it will only lead to further legal trouble, and it could prevent you from being able to negotiate with the lender to find a solution that allows you to keep your home.