Nebraska
Foreclosure Law
Summary
Quick
Facts
-
Judicial Foreclosure Available:
Yes
-
Non-Judicial Foreclosure
Available: No
- Primary
Security Instruments:
Mortgage
-
Timeline: Typically 180
days
- Right
of Redemption:
Yes
-
Deficiency Judgments Allowed:
No
In Nebraska,
lenders may foreclose on a
mortgage in default by using the
judicial foreclosure
process.
Judicial
Foreclosure
Generally, in
judicial foreclosure, a court
decrees the amount of the
borrowers debt and gives him or
her a short time to pay. If the
borrower fails to pay within that
time, the clerk of the court then
advertises the property for
sale.
In Nebraska,
the court may order the entire
property to be sold, or just some
part of it. The order of sale may
be delayed for up to nine (9)
months after the judgment if the
borrower files a written request
for a delay with the clerk of the
court within twenty (20) days
after the judgment is rendered.
Otherwise, the order commanding
the sale of the mortgaged
property will be given twenty
(20) days after the
judgment.
The borrower
has the right to cure the default
at any time while the suit is
still pending by paying the
delinquent amount owed on the
mortgage, as well as any interest
and costs that have accrued.
However, the court may still
enter a decree of foreclosure and
sale, which may be enforced if
the buyer goes into default on
the mortgage again in the
future.
The sheriff
must give public notice of the
time and place of the sale
by:
1) posting the notice on the
courthouse door; 2) posting the
notice in at least five other
public places in the county where
the property is located; and 3)
by advertising the property for
sale once a week for a period of
four (4) weeks in a newspaper
published in the county where the
property is located.
The court must
confirm the sale after it takes
place and once this is occurs,
the borrower has no right of
redemption.
More information on Nebraska
foreclosure laws.