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A 30-Day Notice to Vacate or a 60-Day Notice to Vacate to terminate a tenancy can be used in most states when the landlord does not have a reason to end the tenancy. (The length of the required notice can be slightly longer or shorter in some states.) Rent Control Exceptions. Many rent control cities, however, go beyond state laws and require the landlord to prove a legally recognized reason for termination. These laws are known as "just cause eviction protection." (Tenants in only a couple of states -- New Jersey and New Hampshire -- also enjoy just cause eviction protection.) Eviction LawsuitFollowing receipt of a termination notice, if you haven't moved out or fixed the lease or rental agreement violation, the landlord must properly serve you with a summons and complaint for eviction in order to proceed with the eviction. Possible DefensesIf you do get hauled into court, you may be able to diminish the landlord's chances of victory. Perhaps you can point to shoddy paperwork in the preparation of the eviction lawsuit. Or maybe the landlord's illegal behavior, such as not maintaining the rental property in habitable condition, will serve as a good defense, as would a claim that the eviction lawsuit is in retaliation for your insistence on needed, major repairs. Sheriff's EscortEven if the landlord wins the eviction lawsuit, the landlord can't just move you and your things out onto the sidewalk. Landlords must give the court judgment to a local law enforcement office, along with a fee. A sheriff or marshal gives you a notice that the officer will be back within a few days to escort you off the property. At that point, it's best to acknowledge defeat and leave on your own steam. Renters in Foreclosure: What Are Their Rights?by Attorney Janet Portman The sub-prime mortgage industry meltdown is now affecting renters whose landlords have lost their rental properties through foreclosure. The mortgage industry crisis that started in 2006 has resulted in thousands -- no, make that millions -- of foreclosed homes. Most of the occupants are the homeowners themselves, who must scramble to find alternate housing with very little notice. They’re being joined by scores of renters who discover, often with no warning, that their rented house or apartment is now owned by a bank, which wants them out in a matter of days. For most of these renters, their options are bleak. Who Are the Renters?Renters who lose their homes to foreclosures don’t fit a single profile. Many of them live in smaller buildings, condos, and single-family homes. They’re located in cities and surrounding suburbs, in low-income and upscale neighborhoods. In short, foreclosed homes are everywhere, and they're rented by people with widely varying incomes, including some with “Section 8” (federal housing assistance) vouchers. Who Are the Defaulting Owners?The typical foreclosed home may have originally been owner-occupied, but more often it’s owned by investors and speculators who were hoping to profit from the rents. During the heyday of sub-prime mortgages -- when practically anyone who breathed and could sign their name could get a loan, usually with an adjustable rate -- these owners easily bought-up rental properties. They counted on rising rents and low interest rates to cover their mortgage payments. Caught between the slump in housing values and the rise of their mortgage interest rates, these owners could not feasibly sell nor extract enough rent to cover their monthly costs. In droves, they lost their investments. For example, in Minneapolis and its surrounding suburbs, 38% of the 2006 foreclosures involved rental properties; in Minneapolis alone, 65% were rentals. Who Are the New Landlords?When an owner defaults on a mortgage, the mortgage holder, often a bank, either becomes the new owner or sells the property at a public sale. If the bank becomes the owner, it may pay a servicing company to handle the property. But don't expect close attention -- these companies are focused on financial matters, not mundane things like maintenance. Some renters find themselves with a new owner even before the foreclosure. Lawyers in Massachusetts, for example, contend that many new rental property owners are investment trusts that specialize in purchasing troubled loans directly from banks, then foreclosing, evicting, and selling.
Renters in Foreclosed Properties Lose Their LeasesMost renters will lose their leases upon foreclosure. The rule in most states is that if the mortgage was recorded before the lease was signed, a foreclosure will wipe out the lease (this rule is known as “first in time, first in right”). Because most leases last no longer than a year, it's all too common for the mortgage to predate the lease and destroy it upon foreclosure. That doesn't always mean the lease-holding tenants have to leave immediately -- but those who remain join the ranks of month-to–month renters, all of whom can be terminated with proper notice, usually 30 days. And the new owners tend to move quickly to terminate, giving as little notice as is legally possible (sometimes no more than three days). Tenants who refuse to leave face an eviction lawsuit, for which they usually have no legal defense. The impact of an eviction on a tenant's ability to find future housing can be devastating. No law prevents a future landlord from automatically rejecting tenants with evictions on their record, even when those tenants were the innocent victims of a foreclosing bank. There are some notable exceptions, however, to this grim scenario. Tenants who participate in the federally financed Section 8 program will see their leases survive, as will tenants in New Jersey, New Hampshire, the District of Columbia, and, as of the end of November 2007, Massachusetts. In these states, new owners cannot evict lease-holding tenants unless the tenants have failed to pay the rent or violated any other important lease term or law. Tenants in other states who live in cities with rent control “just cause” eviction protection may also be protected. Does It Make Sense to Evict Tenants?New owners evict existing tenants because they believe that vacant properties are easier to sell. Common sense suggests otherwise. In many situations a building full of stable, rent-paying tenants will be more valuable (and command a higher price) than an empty building. Emptied buildings are also prone to vandalism and other deterioration – after all, no one is on site to monitor their condition. When entire neighborhoods become a wasteland of empty foreclosed multifamily buildings, their value drops even further. It’s hard to understand why new owners choose to pay lawyers to start eviction procedures instead of paying a modest fee to a management company to collect rent and manage the property while they wait to sell.
What Can a Foreclosed-Upon Tenant Do?Renters whose states follow the “first in time, first in right” rule, where a lease can be wiped out by a foreclosure if the mortgage was recorded before the lease, will not be able to convince a court to change that rule. But tenants who learn that their new landlord is a bank can at least lessen the financial consequences by suing the former owner. Here’s how it works. After signing a lease, the landlord is legally bound to deliver the rental for the entire lease term. In legalese, this duty is known as the “covenant of quiet enjoyment.” A landlord who defaults on a mortgage, which sets in motion the loss of the lease, violates this covenant, and the tenant can sue for the damages it causes. Small claims court is a perfect place to bring such a lawsuit. The tenant can sue for moving and apartment-searching costs, application fees, and the difference, if any, between the new rent for a comparable rental and the rent under the old lease. Though the former owner is probably not flush with money, these cases won’t demand very much, and the judgment and award will stay on the books for many years. A persistent tenant can probably collect what's owed eventually. Press for Legislative ReformsWhy should hapless tenants suffer the consequences of risky lending practices engaged in by others? States besides those mentioned above can enact legislation to protect tenants. On the federal level, some action is already under way. HR 3915, The Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act of 2007, would not only tighten up the mortgage industry, but provide that tenants’ leases would survive foreclosure, and that month-to-month tenants would be entitled to 90 days’ termination notice. aidrenegade
By aidrenegade - on Jan 5, 2009
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By Penelope - on Jun 14, 2007 Hello! About a month and a half ago I fell behind on my rent due to an illness. Even though I talked to my landlord and have been making him payments, we are still going to court on June 25th. I have been a good tenant for two years now and this is the only time I have been behind. I am about $900 in arrears. Any help would be appreciated and evenually padi back. I hope to start my new promotion soon, so it is not out of the relm of possibility for me to make repayments within the next 3 months. Thank in advance for whoever can help. Foxy Brown422
By Foxy Brown422 - on Dec 7, 2006 HI!MOTHERLOVE I SORRY TO HEAR ABOUT YOUR SITUATION. I AM A MOTHER OF TWO GIRLS AND I KNOW HOW HARD IT CAN BE ESPECIALLY IF YOU ONLY GET SOCIAL SECURITY. I KNOW OF A GROUP CALLED MODESTNEEDS. ORG. THEY ARE THERE TO SPECIFICALLY PREVENT HOMELESSNESS. YOU HAVE TO HAVE PROOF CIRCUMSTANCES ARE AS YOU SAY. TELL THEM WHY YOU ARE BEHIND. THEY USUALLY HELP PEOPLE UP TO 1,000. GOD BLESS YOU AND GOODLUCK. FOXYBROWN422 KNOWLEDGE IS POWER! MOTHERLOVE4MY2
By MOTHERLOVE4MY2 - on Dec 7, 2006... modified on Dec 7, 2006 HI I AM A SINGLE MOTHER OF TWO AT THE PRESENT MOMENT I AM GETTING EVICTED I AM BEHIND IN MY RENT BY 2,419 DOLLARS BUT THAT IS NOT MY PROBLEM MY PROBLEM IS THAT ON NOVEMBER 30TH AT 5PM I WENT TO COURT WITH MY LANDLORD THERE I MET WITH MY LANDLORD LAWYER.PRIOR TO GOING IN FRONT OF THE JUDGE THE LAWYER AND I CAME TO A VERBAL AGREEMENT THAT I WILL PAY 300 EVERY TWO WEEKS ON MY BACK RENT AND KEEP MY MONTHLY RENT PAID AND ON TIME.THIS AGREEMENT WAS ALSO MADE IN FRONT OF THE JUDGE.THE NEXT DAY I RECEIVED A LETTER FROM MY LANDLORD IT WAS A NOTICE OF TERMINATION STATING THAT THEY ARE NOT GOING TO RENEW MY LEASE AND THAT I HAVE TO BE OUT BY 12/31/06 CAN SOMEONE PLEASE HELP ME WITH 1,225 THAT'S ALL I NEED I CAN DO THE REST MYSELF I'M JUST WORRIED CAUSE EITHER WAY I GO I'M GOING TO GET EVICTED IF I DON'T PAY THEY CAN KICK ME OUT BEFORE THE 31TH ,AND IF I DO PAY I WON'T HAVE NO MONEY TO MOVE ON THE 31TH.CAN SOMEONE PLEASE HELP ME. CHRISTMAS FOR MY TWO GIRLS IS NOT HAPPENING THIS YEAR I HOPE SOMEONE OUT THERE CAN HELP ME Aidpage ContributorsAidpageTeam
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