CRAVEN, Circuit Judge.
This three-judge court was convened to consider an attack on North Carolina’s procedure for real property mortgage foreclosure, sale, and eviction, as depriving the plaintiff/mortgagor of her property without due process of law under the fourteenth amendment.
Plaintiff, a widowed domestic worker, and her mother owned a residence house and lot located in Charlotte, North Carolina, encumbering it at the time of purchase1 in 1965 by a first deed of trust in favor of a local bank. In 1966 the plaintiff contracted for the installation of aluminum siding on her house, signing an installment note for $4,543.56 and securing the obligation by a second deed of trust on the property.2 The note and the second deed of trust were respectively negotiated and assigned by the aluminum siding contractor to defendant, Dixie Acceptance Corporation; defendant Gray is the trustee.
In 1972 plaintiff fell behind on her second mortgage, and in November, with payments six months in arrears, Dixie requested Gray to commence foreclosure proceedings. Advance notice of the public sale was given in conformity with the statute,3 which requires posting at the [1252]*1252courthouse door and newspaper publication but not personal notice to the mortgagor. At the foreclosure sale, on January 18, 1973, Dixie submitted a high bid of $1,904.90, which was calculated to be precisely the sum of the balance due on the note plus fees, commissions, and expenses.
As required by statute,4 Gray, on January 18, 1973, reported the foreclosure sale to the defendant Blackburn, the Clerk of the Mecklenburg County Superior Court, the county of both situs and sale. Blackburn filed the preliminary report that same day.
No satisfaction of the debt having been made 5 nor upset bid6 filed with Blackburn within ten days after the filing of the preliminary report, the rights of the parties to the sale — Dixie and Gray — became fixed.7
[1253]*1253On February 15, 1973, Gray, as required,8 presented a “Final Report and Account” of the sale, which showed, inter alia, receipts and disbursements, a copy of the posted notice with a deputy clerk’s signed affirmation of the date of posting, and a copy of the published notice with an accompanying affidavit attesting to the fact of publication. A deputy clerk, upon payment of a $10 fee, audited and approved the final report and filed it that day.
Also on February 15, 1973, defendant Watts — to whom Dixie had assigned its bid9 — purchased the property for the same amount, $1,904.90, and became the owner of record.
Plaintiff learned of the foreclosure proceedings for the first time in mid-March when Watts visited the property to inspect his purchase.10
On March 26, 1973, pursuant to statute,11 Watts filed a verified “Petition for Application of Writ of Assistance and Possession” with Blackburn. It recited the relevant facts regarding the sale and alleged on belief that plaintiff had been in continuous possession of the property and had refused to surrender same. Blackburn issued a “Notice and Order of Service” directing the sheriff to serve same, together with a copy of the petition, on plaintiff, who was thereby advised to appear at a hearing before the [1254]*1254clerk on April 11, 1973, and show cause why she should not be evicted.
This § 198312 action was filed on March 27, 1973.13 Plaintiff seeks a declaration 14 that N.C.Gen.Stat. § 45-21.1715 violates due process for failing to assure notice and an opportunity to be heard prior to foreclosure conducted pursuant thereto, and permanent injunctive relief against all North Carolina Superior Court Clerks restraining them from both filing preliminary reports (§ 45-21.26) 16 and auditing, approving, and filing final reports (§ 45-21.33) 17 unless there is a showing either (1) that prior notice and an opportunity for hearing have been given or (2) that those rights have been waived.18
We are confronted with three questions :
(1) Is the state sufficiently involved in the foreclosure proceedings so as to satisfy the “state action” requirement of the fourteenth amendment and § 1983?
(2) Is the plaintiff entitled to notice and hearing, in some form, prior to the foreclosure, absent an express waiver?
(3) Has there been an express waiver of due process rights?
Answering the first two questions affirmatively, we conclude that North Carolina’s foreclosure procedure is unconstitutional under the fourteenth amendment and, finding no waiver, we hold that the plaintiff is entitled to relief.
I.
The procedural due process clause of the fourteenth amendment speaks only to the states. It is thus essential to plaintiff’s cause of action that there be “state action.” She asserts there is because the state officials — the clerk and the sheriff — participate directly in the challenged activity: the deprivation without procedural safeguards of ownership and possessory rights to real property. Citing the minimal involvement of state officials in the debtor-creditor disputes at issue in the Sniadach-FuentesMitchell19 trilogy, plaintiff insists that the extensive statutory duties and powers of the clerk (and sheriff) render this case indistinguishable from the state action found, albeit without discussion, in each of those rulings.20
[1255]*1255In response, the defendants assert that the state has neither acted directly nor become “significantly involved”21 with the foreclosure proceedings. Negating the “direct action” theory, the defendants assert that the deprivation was purely private: “the realty in question was foreclosed pursuant to an entirely self-executing power of sale without the aid, assistance, or comfort of any agent of the state.”22 The other state action concepts are dismissed as distinguishable in that the instant case presents no “significant” state involvement.23
Fairly stated, the defendants’ argument reduces to the following: (1) the decision to foreclose when default is apparent is a private one pursuant to the trustee’s contractual duties;24 (2) the choice of conducting the public sale under § 45-21.17(a) (agreed-upon form of notice) or (b) (incorporation of statutory notice) is dictated solely by the deed of trust; (3) since no upset bid was filed, consummation of the public sale occurred without direction from or participation by the clerk;25 (4) the “deprivation without notice”' — public sale and subsequent closing — is thus a private, self-executing act mandated by and conducted solely under a contractual power; (5) since the sale is “already consummated” when the clerk “enters the picture,” his subsequent “passive” acceptance of papers for filing merely reflects, not causes, the injury;
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CRAVEN, Circuit Judge.
This three-judge court was convened to consider an attack on North Carolina’s procedure for real property mortgage foreclosure, sale, and eviction, as depriving the plaintiff/mortgagor of her property without due process of law under the fourteenth amendment.
Plaintiff, a widowed domestic worker, and her mother owned a residence house and lot located in Charlotte, North Carolina, encumbering it at the time of purchase1 in 1965 by a first deed of trust in favor of a local bank. In 1966 the plaintiff contracted for the installation of aluminum siding on her house, signing an installment note for $4,543.56 and securing the obligation by a second deed of trust on the property.2 The note and the second deed of trust were respectively negotiated and assigned by the aluminum siding contractor to defendant, Dixie Acceptance Corporation; defendant Gray is the trustee.
In 1972 plaintiff fell behind on her second mortgage, and in November, with payments six months in arrears, Dixie requested Gray to commence foreclosure proceedings. Advance notice of the public sale was given in conformity with the statute,3 which requires posting at the [1252]*1252courthouse door and newspaper publication but not personal notice to the mortgagor. At the foreclosure sale, on January 18, 1973, Dixie submitted a high bid of $1,904.90, which was calculated to be precisely the sum of the balance due on the note plus fees, commissions, and expenses.
As required by statute,4 Gray, on January 18, 1973, reported the foreclosure sale to the defendant Blackburn, the Clerk of the Mecklenburg County Superior Court, the county of both situs and sale. Blackburn filed the preliminary report that same day.
No satisfaction of the debt having been made 5 nor upset bid6 filed with Blackburn within ten days after the filing of the preliminary report, the rights of the parties to the sale — Dixie and Gray — became fixed.7
[1253]*1253On February 15, 1973, Gray, as required,8 presented a “Final Report and Account” of the sale, which showed, inter alia, receipts and disbursements, a copy of the posted notice with a deputy clerk’s signed affirmation of the date of posting, and a copy of the published notice with an accompanying affidavit attesting to the fact of publication. A deputy clerk, upon payment of a $10 fee, audited and approved the final report and filed it that day.
Also on February 15, 1973, defendant Watts — to whom Dixie had assigned its bid9 — purchased the property for the same amount, $1,904.90, and became the owner of record.
Plaintiff learned of the foreclosure proceedings for the first time in mid-March when Watts visited the property to inspect his purchase.10
On March 26, 1973, pursuant to statute,11 Watts filed a verified “Petition for Application of Writ of Assistance and Possession” with Blackburn. It recited the relevant facts regarding the sale and alleged on belief that plaintiff had been in continuous possession of the property and had refused to surrender same. Blackburn issued a “Notice and Order of Service” directing the sheriff to serve same, together with a copy of the petition, on plaintiff, who was thereby advised to appear at a hearing before the [1254]*1254clerk on April 11, 1973, and show cause why she should not be evicted.
This § 198312 action was filed on March 27, 1973.13 Plaintiff seeks a declaration 14 that N.C.Gen.Stat. § 45-21.1715 violates due process for failing to assure notice and an opportunity to be heard prior to foreclosure conducted pursuant thereto, and permanent injunctive relief against all North Carolina Superior Court Clerks restraining them from both filing preliminary reports (§ 45-21.26) 16 and auditing, approving, and filing final reports (§ 45-21.33) 17 unless there is a showing either (1) that prior notice and an opportunity for hearing have been given or (2) that those rights have been waived.18
We are confronted with three questions :
(1) Is the state sufficiently involved in the foreclosure proceedings so as to satisfy the “state action” requirement of the fourteenth amendment and § 1983?
(2) Is the plaintiff entitled to notice and hearing, in some form, prior to the foreclosure, absent an express waiver?
(3) Has there been an express waiver of due process rights?
Answering the first two questions affirmatively, we conclude that North Carolina’s foreclosure procedure is unconstitutional under the fourteenth amendment and, finding no waiver, we hold that the plaintiff is entitled to relief.
I.
The procedural due process clause of the fourteenth amendment speaks only to the states. It is thus essential to plaintiff’s cause of action that there be “state action.” She asserts there is because the state officials — the clerk and the sheriff — participate directly in the challenged activity: the deprivation without procedural safeguards of ownership and possessory rights to real property. Citing the minimal involvement of state officials in the debtor-creditor disputes at issue in the Sniadach-FuentesMitchell19 trilogy, plaintiff insists that the extensive statutory duties and powers of the clerk (and sheriff) render this case indistinguishable from the state action found, albeit without discussion, in each of those rulings.20
[1255]*1255In response, the defendants assert that the state has neither acted directly nor become “significantly involved”21 with the foreclosure proceedings. Negating the “direct action” theory, the defendants assert that the deprivation was purely private: “the realty in question was foreclosed pursuant to an entirely self-executing power of sale without the aid, assistance, or comfort of any agent of the state.”22 The other state action concepts are dismissed as distinguishable in that the instant case presents no “significant” state involvement.23
Fairly stated, the defendants’ argument reduces to the following: (1) the decision to foreclose when default is apparent is a private one pursuant to the trustee’s contractual duties;24 (2) the choice of conducting the public sale under § 45-21.17(a) (agreed-upon form of notice) or (b) (incorporation of statutory notice) is dictated solely by the deed of trust; (3) since no upset bid was filed, consummation of the public sale occurred without direction from or participation by the clerk;25 (4) the “deprivation without notice”' — public sale and subsequent closing — is thus a private, self-executing act mandated by and conducted solely under a contractual power; (5) since the sale is “already consummated” when the clerk “enters the picture,” his subsequent “passive” acceptance of papers for filing merely reflects, not causes, the injury;26 (6) any subsequent eviction by the sheriff at the direction of the clerk does not cause an [1256]*1256unconstitutional deprivation since the statute27 requires ten days’ prior notice and, at least implicity, opportunity for hearing (before the clerk).
It is a good argument but hinges, we think, upon a rather myopic characterization of the role played by the state through the clerk of court. While the state has left to the trustee the functions of giving notice and conducting the public auction, the essentials thereof are subject to explicit verification by the clerk under § 45-21.26.28 Contrary to defendants’ characterization, this is not merely an empty ritual: we take the state at its word when it has vested the clerk with contempt power to enforce a failure timely to file a complete and correct report.29 Significantly, the filing of a valid report is a necessary precondition to the trustee’s power to convey to the highest bidder at the auction. Only this filing starts the running of the ten-day period.30 Only the lapse thereof without intervention — as by an upset bid — empowers the trustee to consummate the sale.
Bald assertions that the trustee’s power is self-executing and that the clerk’s role is ancillary to consummation are simply belied by the statutes themselves. The state has vested not in the trustee but in the clerk the administration of the upset bid provisions, which are set forth in the margin.31 That § 45-21.27 exists primarily to protect the mortgagor’s equity is clear: the intent is to extend to private foreclosure sales an effective equivalent of an equity court’s power to decree a resale upon the filing of a substantial raised bid.32 The statute is by operation of law incor[1257]*1257porated into all deeds of trust.33 The clerk’s role thereunder is not merely “ministerial”: he has discretion, for example, to require the “increase” bid to be in cash and, in addition, a cash bond up to the full amount of the original bid. On the other hand, the statute is to be liberally construed to give the mortgagor the full benefit of the intended protection.34 Thus the power to accept or reject a given bid, within the confines of the statute, gives the clerk an important role vis-a-vis the mortgagor’s equity: similar to the court of equity in a judicial proceeding, the clerk can make it more or less difficult for a mortgagor or a third party to trigger a resale, depending upon how he exercises the discretion conferred upon him.35
Where there is no upset bid,36 as here, the clerk’s role is vital. His audit validates, inter alia, the trustee’s disbursements, including the equity, or lack thereof, which might inure to the mortgagor. Thus, without a showing of personal notice to the mortgagor of the property, the disposition of the proceeds of the sale must be approved by the clerk. It is the clerk to whom the purchaser must then apply for an eviction order — with ten days’ notice to the party in possession, as the ’ defendants hasten to point out. But notice of what? Then the ball game is over — the mortgagor has become, at best, a squatter, at worst, a trespasser. The clerk is not empowered to reopen; the purchaser need only make a formal showing of what already is on file: the exercise of a power of sale, consummation or confirmation thereof, and purchase and payment by him. The “hearing” before the clerk to which plaintiff was summoned would have been of no avail.37
[1258]*1258Defendants have urged, in effect, that we examine the various elements of the foreclosure proceeding as disparate bits and pieces. But, following the evident legislative purpose, we view the statutory framework as a coherent entity. Before us is a scheme designed at least in part to lower the cost and increase the efficiency of real estate foreclosures.38 It is, in effect, a streamlined version of a judicial sale, with the clerk exercising by detailed statutory authority many of the supervisory powers inherent in a court of equity. While it might be possible to revive the common law power of sale procedure — in which the state arguably played no role — 39 North Carolina has clearly not done so. We hold that the direct participation by the clerk40 in the procedure by which plaintiff was deprived of ownership, and threatened to be deprived of possession, of her property constituted state action.
II.
Defendants do not seriously suggest that in the absence of an express waiver the failure to give plaintiff .personal notice of the foreclosure sale until after title vested in the purchaser and not until two weeks before she was to be evicted as a trespasser is not vulnerable to a constitutional attack. This failure must be examined over against the principle that
[a]n elementary and fundamental requirement of due process in any proceeding which is to be accorded finality is notice reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their objections.
Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 314, 70 S.Ct. 652, 657, 94 L.Ed. 865 (1950). To satisfy the “[njotice . . . required before’ property interests are disturbed, before assessments are made, before penalties are assessed,” 41 defendants rely upon posting at the county courthouse door and an advertisement in a publication which serves “the law profession.” 42 To propose to a homeowner that he trek to the courthouse or spend 20 cents to examine fine-print legal notices, daily for the duration of a 20-year mortgage, as his sole protection against summary eviction, seems to us to offer him nothing of value. So also it must appear to counsel — for we were told in oral argument that the better practice is to give actual notice.
“[W]hen notice is a person’s due, process which is a mere gesture is not due process.” Mullane, supra, 339 U.S. at 315, 70 S.Ct. at 657. Since “[t]he means employed must be such as one desirous of actually informing the absentee might reasonably adopt to accomplish it,” id., at 315, 70 S.Ct. at 657, we hold that, absent express waiver, [1259]*1259plaintiff43 was entitled to a good faith-attempt to notify her by means reasonably calculated to inform her of imminent foreclosure. Here, plaintiff got no notice, nor was there even the slightest reasonable expectation that the statutory forms of notice would ever come to her attention.
Without question, notice must be coupled with “opportunity for hearing appropriate to the nature of the case.” Id., at 313, 70 S.Ct. at 657; Fuentes v. Shevin, 407 U.S. 67, 92 S.Ct. 1983, 32 L.Ed.2d 556 (1972); Boddie v. Connecticut, 401 U.S. 371, 91 S.Ct. 780, 28 L.Ed.2d 113 (1971). We recognize that the “formality and procedural requisites for the hearing can vary, depending upon the importance of the interests involved and the nature of the subsequent proceedings.” Boddie, supra, 401 U.S. at 378, 91 S.Ct. 780 at 786 (footnote omitted). One’s home or place of business is usually at stake; it is quite likely the mortgagor’s most valuable asset. On the other hand, given the kind of notice required by the fourteenth amendment, the mortgagor will in the future have available both the upset bid provisions and a suit for injunctive relief under § 45-21.34. Furthermore, the issues at any early stage are likely to center on obligation and default, “ordinarily uncomplicated matters that lend themselves to documentary proof ..” Mitchell v. W. T. Grant Co., 416 U.S. 600, 609, 94 S.Ct. 1895, 1901, 40 L.Ed.2d 406 (1974). Under the circumstances, and consistent with the existing statutory scheme, we think at a minimum due process requires the trustee to make an initial showing before the clerk or similar neutral official that the mortgagor is in default under the obligation; the mortgagor must of course be afforded the opportunity to rebut and defend the charges. Fuentes, supra, 407 U.S. at 96-97, 92 S.Ct. 1983.
As to time of hearing, in this kind of case, which presents no extraordinary situation, the mortgagor must “be given an opportunity for a hearing before he is deprived of any significant property interest . . ..” Boddie, supra, 401 U.S. at 379, 91 S.Ct. at 786 (footnote omitted). The right to submit an upset bid is obviously not a hearing. The extraordinary injunctive relief available under § 45-21.34 does not suffice because (1) the burden of proof is clearly on the mortgagor; (2) he most likely must show irreparable damage, as by inadequancy of the bid; and (3) a condition precedent to relief is a bond providing for full indemnification. See Fuentes v. Shevin, supra; Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645, 92 S.Ct. 1208, 31 L.Ed.2d 551 (1972); Armstrong v. Manzo, 380 U.S. 545, 85 S.Ct. 1187, 14 L.Ed. 2d 62 (1965). And at the hearing before the clerk prior to eviction, the mortgagor is presented with a fait accompli: the property has been sold, the proceeds distributed, the deed recorded.
Finding the later “hearings” insufficient, and perceiving no countervailing reasons for delay,44 we hold that a hearing prior to foreclosure and sale is essential. Fuentes v. Shevin, supra.
[1260]*1260The property rights at issue here were, of course, created by private arrangement. Due process rights of a mortgagor can be bargained away. D. H. Overmyer v. Frick, 405 U.S. 174, 92 S.Ct. 775, 31 L.Ed.2d 124 (1972); Boddie v. Connecticut, supra; National Equipment Rental, Ltd. v. Szukhent, 375 U.S. 311, 84 S.Ct. 411, 11 L.Ed.2d 354 (1964). We follow Overmyer in declining to hold that North Carolina’s foreclosure procedure is per se violative of the due process clause. 405 U.S. at 184-88, 92 S.Ct. 775. But since we are not to “presume acquiescence in the loss of fundamental rights,” Ohio Bell Telephone Co. v. Public Utilities Commission, 301 U.S. 292, 307, 57 S.Ct. 724, 731, 81 L.Ed. 1093 (1937), we hold that defendants are barred by the fourteenth amendment from working a deprivation of the mortgagor’s property without prior notice and an opportunity for a timely hearing — unless it is clear that those rights have been expressly waived.
III.
Defendants contend that by signing the deed of trust plaintiff waived her procedural due process rights under the standards set out in D. H. Overmyer v. Frick, supra, and Fuentes v. Shevin, supra. In Ov.ermyer the Court held that in the corporate-property-right context of that case, the debtor’s waiver by cognovit note was “voluntarily, intelligently, and knowingly” made. Id., 405 U.S. at 187, 92 S.Ct. 775. The facts disclosed neither unequal bargaining power nor a contract of adhesion; both parties were fully aware of the significance of the waiver provisions, and the debtor was counseled. Fuentes, on the other hand, dealt with a typical consumer-creditor dispute under a conditional sales contract:
The facts of the present cases are a far cry from those of Overmyer. There was no bargaining over contractual terms between the parties who, in any event, were far from equal in bargaining power. The purported waiver provision was a printed part of a form sales contract and a necessary condition of the sale. The appellees made no showing whatever that the appellants were actually aware or made aware of the significance of the fine print now relied upon as a waiver of constitutional rights.
The Court in Overmyer observed that “where the contract is one of adhesion, where there is great disparity in bargaining power, and where the debtor receives nothing for the [waiver] provision, other legal consequences may ensue.” Id., [405 U.S.] at 188, 92 S.Ct. [775], at 783. Yet, as in Overmyer, there is no need in the present cases to canvass those consequences fully. For a waiver of constitutional rights in any context must, at the very least, be clear. We need not concern ourselves with the involuntariness or unintelligence of a waiver when the contractual language relied upon does not, on its face, even amount to a waiver.
The contracts included nothing about the waiver of a prior hearing.
Id., 407 U.S. at 95-96, 92 S.Ct. at 2002.
We think Fuentes applies here. The purported waiver of due process rights was contained in a paragraph 45 which, like most of the language of the deed of trust, was printed in minute, 8-point type. Defendants have made no showing that plaintiff was actually aware46 or made aware of the legal significance of [1261]*1261that language. Nor, as in Fuentes, does the deed of trust even allude to the right to a prior hearing. Plaintiff cannot be found to have waived a right which is not disclosed on the face of the contract.
Thus, while plaintiff’s signature must, of course, be taken as a knowing agreement to encumber her property as security for the underlying debt, the language in the deed of trust does not constitute a waiver of the constitutional protections which, we hold, accompany foreclosure. “Courts indulge every reasonable presumption against waiver.” Aetna Insurance Co. v. Kennedy, 301 U.S. 389, 393, 57 S.Ct. 809, 812, 81 L.Ed. 1177 (1937) (footnote omitted).
RELIEF
This is not a class action. Presumably Blackburn’s interest is identical to that of the other 99 clerks of superior court, but their interests are not represented by him nor are they joined. To enjoin the clerk of one of 100 counties is unseemly and, we think, unnecessary. County and state officers of North Carolina are not, and never have been, indifferent to the commands of the Constitution as interpreted and applied by either state or federal courts. Stare decisis in a state dedicated to the rule of law can be as effective, we think, as injunction.
As to the state’s interest in the litigation, as represented by Blackburn, we will enter a judgment declaring that the statutes are not per se unconstitutional, but are unconstitutional as applied; that foreclosure and sale pursuant to the statutory scheme is prospectively unlawful and void unless (a) the power of sale is determined by the clerk to be a knowing, voluntary, and intelligent waiver of the fourteenth amendment due process rights, or (b) the clerk determines there has been adequate and timely notice to the mortgagor coupled with opportunity for a hearing before any rights are lost.
As to specific relief for Turner, an injunction will issue requiring that Watts convey title to her upon her execution of a note (secured by mortgage to him) in the amount of the indebtedness on the property discharged by Watts with interest at six percent, less payments made by Turner to Watts pursuant to Judge McMillan’s preliminary injunction. Since the aborted foreclosure and sale violated the fourteenth amendment rights of Turner, it would be unjust and inequitable to require that she pay the expenses of those proceedings.
Costs will be taxed against the defendants.
We request that counsel for plaintiff prepare and submit to opposing counsel and the court an appropriate judgment.