Legal Question in Landlord & Tenant Law in California

Month to month renter needs advice on forclosure home!

Hi,

I currently rent a room in the city of West Covina, CA. The owner of the house gave me a 30 day notice to vacate the home on June1, 2009. I have not yet found a place to stay and she is threatening with the locks to be changed if I am not out. The ownere recently moved out of in the middle of the month due to what she explained, that she was behind on her house payments and that the bank was unwilling to work with her and she was abandoning the home. A real estate agent informed me from their own research that the home is not in the banks hands yet. I asked the lady why she wouldnt just stay in the home until the bank forces her out. She replied that she didnt wat her credit to get worse and not be able to get a place later on for her and her children (at speaking terms) She simply said now that I must leave otherwise I will not be able to remove my items because the locks were to be changed and utilites shut off. I mentioned that I could possilbly take over utilities, and she answered ,no. I then told her that her 30 day notice was not enough for me and my 3 children and was enforcing the ''rental forclosure relief act of 2009''. Please help! I dont know what will happen next. She abandoned the home, why do I have to go now?


Asked on 6/30/09, 12:28 am

1 Answer from Attorneys

David Gibbs The Gibbs Law Firm, APC

Re: Month to month renter needs advice on forclosure home!

If the owner of the home has abandoned it, and it going to let it be foreclosed by her lender, then I doubt she is going to follow through with her threats to change the locks - that's not a cheap proposition, and she probably won't spend the money.

How long have you lived there? If less than 1 year, then the 30 day notice was technically correct, and you should move by the end of today. If you have lived there more than 1 year, then the notice is defective, because she must give you 60 days notice to terminate your tenancy. Irrespective, she cannot exercise "self-help" by locking you out, nor can or will the bank who acquires the property in foreclosure. After the notice expires, the landlord then has to file an eviction action to remove you from the property. Again, that costs money, and I doubt she will spend it. If you are still in the house by the time the bank forecloses, then the bank will give you a sixty (60) day notice to quit the property. They often will then come and offer you "cash for keys", i.e., they will pay you to leave early, and without trashing the house. Different banks do different things, so don't bank on that money.

First thing to do is see if you can get the utilities transferred into your name so that they do not get shut off. Second, notify the landlord that you do not intend to vacate the premises, and if she attempts to lock you out, you will protect your rights including possibly a lawsuit against her for wrongful eviction (landlord self-help). You are going to have to ultimately move, but you may be able to stretch this out for a while to save some money to be ready to move.

*Due to the limitations of the LawGuru Forums, The Gibbs Law Firm, APC's (the "Firm") participation in responding to questions posted herein does not constitute legal advice, nor legal representation of the person or entity posting a question. No Attorney/Client relationship is or shall be construed to be created hereby. The information provided is general and requires that the poster obtain specific legal advice from an attorney. The poster shall not rely upon the information provided herein as legal advice nor as the basis for making any decisions of legal consequence.

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Answered on 6/30/09, 12:01 pm


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