Door One · Real Property

Default & Deed-of-Trust Administration

A secured position is slipping, and the clock is statutory.

Intrustum serves as substitute trustee and administers default under Texas Property Code §51.0075 — the sequencing of notice, the administration of the sale, and the preservation of lien position — each material step decided and signed by a named principal and kept on the record.

The practice serves lenders, noteholders, and servicers. It runs alongside your retained counsel: the firm administers the process; legal judgment belongs to your lawyer. The method is governed by Ordinact™, an Intrustum framework, and the record is anchored in Factivault™, an Intrustum system.

See how the firm's frameworks govern the work, or engage the firm on a specific matter.

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Questions

Common questions

Are you a law firm?
No. Intrustum is not a law firm and does not provide legal services; the firm administers matters alongside clients' retained counsel, and legal judgment belongs to your lawyer.
What does a substitute trustee do?
A substitute trustee administers the sale process under a deed of trust at the direction of the lender or noteholder, following Texas Property Code §51.0075 — notice sequencing, sale administration, and the record of each step.
What happens if a sale leaves a deficiency?
The matter's character changes from real-property-secured to monetary. It is re-classified in writing, and further recovery proceeds under the commercial collection rules of Texas Finance Code Chapter 392.