When you home is sold at a foreclosure auction, and you don't enjoy satisfactory time to move...?
what happens to the personal property that is to say left losing? Also, how soon after the actual auction date does the winner or the wall take the property pay for or evict the current tenant? And if personal property is left astern, can the new owner or edge fine or charge the old owner for moving or disposing of the personal property?Answers: I belive you have enough time to move when you know your house was one forclosed on and going to auction. This doesn't happen over dark to go through the process. Pack very soon and move before you loose your stuff.
It'll depend on the state foreclosure law to determine how soon the new owner can start the eviction process. If you own a redemption period after the sheriff Dutch auction, then you enjoy some extra time (from a few days to a year) to stay in the house underneath state law and not verbs about eviction. But if the state have no redemption, then the eviction process will usually run 2-4 weeks from the date of the sheriff sale.
The personal property is usually only put in the front sward, or moved to a county warehouse and put in storage. Good luck getting it hindmost, either method. The most likely event that will surface is that neighbors will take anything they want, or the items will go into storage, never to be see again and no bureaucrat will be able to track them down.
So you should beckon the sheriff's office or the bright owner before the eviction and ask for the extra few days to move everything out. They can usually hold stale on the eviction if you are in the process of moving, as long as you aren't asking for an extra month or longer. It's easier to pass you a few extra days to move everything out yourself and give up the property peacefully.
But the trial owner would not be able to charge you a fine directly for moving your older stuff out. That is all the responsibility of the sheriff's department, which is the one certainly evicting you. They already get remunerated by the court and property taxes to deal beside foreclosures. Likewise, they wouldn't be able to charge you more only because it was deeply of work pulling you over to give you a speeding ticket -- they entail some justification for charging more, and "too much weighty lifting" isn't good plenty.
Hope that helps.
ForeclosureFish
Can tenant stay after a home have be foreclosed on?
Tenants have signed a lease agreement until August 1st, 2008. Home foreclosed after agreement be signed. No section 8. Located surrounded by California. Do the tenants own to get out, or can they justifiably stay until August 1st? Thank you for any answers!!Answers: They can stay until they get thrown out. Foreclosure wipe out the lease agreement. They may be able to stay if they approach the lender and cut a business deal to stay, however I would not count on it. I do not know what legal rights tenant have lower than these circumstances but I would assume that it still requires a court judgment to evict somebody.
Same article happened to a friend of mine. The trial owner (the bank) is going to show up at the house with some police officer. They'll have anyone that won't walk out arrested for trespassing on their property.
Just make sure you are gone by the date they say-so, you don't want to be threatened with arrest close to my friend was.
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