State Foreclosure Information
Mississippi
When you develop a definite plan of action with well-timed, well-informed steps, you can stop
the foreclosure process and save your home. We have outlined the foreclosure process for the
state of Mississippi.
Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Non-judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
Mississippi offers two methods of foreclosure: by filing lawsuit asking for foreclosure
in a Chancery Court and by sale, if authorized in the mortgage and conducted in compliance
with Mississippi's statutes. The borrower's right to properly conduct of the sale, after
proper notice and advertisement of the sale, may not be waived in the loan documents. Any
defect in the sale that would cause it to be void may not be corrected by the statute of
limitations until ten years have passed from the date of the defective sale.
If the deed of trust contains an authorization for the lender to call upon a trustee to
sell the real estate due to the borrower's default on the loan, such as by non-payment then
the real estate may be sold by the trustee named in the deed of trust (or later appointed
as a substitute) to try and pay off the loan. No sale by a substitute trustee is valid unless
it was first recorded in the Office of the Chancery clerk of the county where the land is
located, prior to the first posting or publishing of the foreclosure sale notice. If the
lender, instead of some other buyer, acquires title to the real estate at foreclosure, then
the lender will give credit for the foreclosure sale price against what was due on the loan.
Preliminary Notices
Advertising
In order to be valid, the foreclosure sale must be advertised for three
consecutive weeks before the sale in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in
which the land is located.
Posting
In addition, one notice must be posted for the same time at the county courthouse
door. The notice must name the borrowers who will lose title.
Cure Procedure
The borrower may stop the foreclosure at any time prior to the sale by coming
up with the missed payments, accrued costs and attorney's and trustee's fees. Only the amount
that is actually past due needs to be paid. Even though the loan documents provided that
the lender could accelerate the loan and make all future payments due, the borrower has
the legal right to disregard the acceleration and stop the foreclosure by paying up the
missed payments, accrued costs and attorney's and trustee's fees. The loan is then to be
treated as though it was not accelerated. The borrower may continue to own and occupy the
property and the lender may not foreclose.
Sale Procedures
Place
The place of sale should be the same as the place of sale for sheriff's
sales of property in the county, which is usually the courthouse.
Manner
The sale must be made by public outcry in the county where the land is located,
or in the county where the borrower lives. The sale must be for cash to the highest bidder.
Post-Sale Matters
After the sale, the trustee or substitute trustee must deliver a trustee's
deed to the successful high bidder. The deed should give the names specified in the old
deed of trust that was foreclosed on. The trustee's deed should also give information sufficient
to locate the foreclosed deed of trust or mortgage in the deed records.
Special Procedures - Foreclosure and Major Disasters
In Mississippi, the governor may declare that a natural disaster, an enemy
attack, or a man-made technological disaster makes it imperative to impose a moratorium
on foreclosures. The moratorium may last for up to two years after the governor's declaration.
The borrower can go to court and file a lawsuit to enjoin a lender from foreclosing. This
would be due to damages to the mortgaged premises or because of economic conditions brought
about by enemy attack, natural disaster or man-made technological disaster causing the fair
market value of the property to decline by 15 percent, if refinancing is impractical under
the circumstances. No cash is required on the injunction. The borrower must take action
because a foreclosure conducted during a moratorium while the borrower did nothing is valid,
even though the borrower could have won by exercising these rights.
Redemption
A foreclosure sale under a deed of trust is final in Mississippi. There
is no right of redemption.
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