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Foreclosure Escrow Accounts

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cocomom

Junior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? California

I just found out the house I am renting is in pre-foreclosure. A NOD was filed last month. I have had a very large deposit and I have been paying my rent ontime every month. Can a set up an escrow account with the county to pay my rent until the house is paid up or is foreclosured on. I just moved in 4 months ago from a house that was foreclosured on and I lost my deposit, rent, and was given only 2 weeks to move out when i found out. Both nice houses, nice areas, expensive rent. What can I do?
 


Cvillecpm

Senior Member
If you have a lease, you are protected. If you have no lease, you have 90 days from the date the bank takes it back.....continue to pay your rent and ask where your deposit is being kept.
 

JETX

Senior Member
If you have a lease, you are protected. If you have no lease, you have 90 days from the date the bank takes it back.....continue to pay your rent and ask where your deposit is being kept.
IGNORE THIS INCORRECT INFORMATION... you are NOT 'protected'... lease or not!!

C-Pill is well known for having a bias towards landlords and is not an attorney. She has NO legal education or experience. Her only 'claim' to knowledge is that she has purchased a book from Nolo press.

So, with this pissant out of the way....
To the OP... there really isn't much you can do. Until such time as the property is actually foreclosed and sold, your lease with, and rent obligation to, the landlord continues. Once the property is sold, the new owner might continue your lease... or terminate it.

Are you on a term lease or month-to-month?? If a M-T-M, give your landlord a WRITTEN 30 day notice to terminate and then move. That way you will be protecting your right to a deposit (if any). If you are on term lease, the foreclosure does not waive the landlords obligation to return your deposit, though you may have to pursue a small claims action to enforce it.

There is some really good information for you online at:
Tenants and Foreclosure
and
Renters and Foreclosure
 

Cvillecpm

Senior Member
Renters in Foreclosure: What Are Their Rights?
Federal legislation signed in May 2009 gives important rights to tenants whose landlords have lost their 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.

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. Caught between the slump in housing values and the rise of mortgage interest rates, these owners could not feasibly sell or 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.

New Owners Means No Maintenance
Many tenants have no idea that their building has been taken at foreclosure. They continue to pay rent to the former owner, who often pockets the money but is hardly inclined to maintain the building it no longer owns. In the meantime, the new owners simply refuse to be landlords, never making repairs or even paying utility bills. Because the banks are stuck with increasing numbers of foreclosed properties that they can't sell, they remain non-landlords for some time, making life impossible for their tenants until those tenants are evicted.

Renters in Foreclosed Properties No Longer Lose Their Leases
Before May 20, 2009, most renters lost their leases upon foreclosure. The rule in most states was that if the mortgage was recorded before the lease was signed, a foreclosure wiped out the lease (this rule is known as "first in time, first in right"). Because most leases last no longer than a year, it was all too common for the mortgage to predate the lease and destroy it upon foreclosure.

These rules changed dramatically on May 20, 2009, when President Obama signed the "Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act of 2009." This legislation provided that leases would survive a foreclosure -- meaning the tenant could stay at least until the end of the lease, and that month-to-month tenants would be entitled to 90 days' notice before having to move out (this notice period is longer than any state's non-foreclosure notice period, a real boon to tenants).

An exception was carved out for the buyer who intends to live on the property -- this buyer may terminate a lease with 90 days' notice. Importantly, the law provides that any state legislation that is more generous to tenants will not be preempted by the federal law. These protections apply to Section 8 tenants, too.

Importantly, tenants who live in cities with rent control "just cause" eviction protection are also protected from terminations at the hands of an acquiring bank or new owner. These tenants can rely on their ordinance's list of allowable, or "just causes," for termination. Because a change of ownership, without more, does not justify a termination, the fact that the change occurred through foreclosure will not justify a termination.

Does It Make Sense to Evict Tenants?
New owners may want to terminate 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.
 

DeenaCA

Member
The federal law was passed after you had to move on short notice four months ago. Check out the Renters in Foreclosure Toolkit at NLIHC: Renters in Foreclosure Toolkit.

To answer your initial question, you do have to continue to pay rent. You can be evicted for nonpayment under state law regardless of the foreclosure. You stated that the house is in "pre-foreclosure", and the federal protections don't apply until the foreclosure goes through.

If you have a fixed-term lease, the new owner may not force you out of the home prior to the end of the term unless he or she plans to occupy the property. This applies to a "bona fide" lease or tenancy as defined in Title VII, PL 111-22:
For purposes of this section, a lease or tenancy shall be considered bona fide only if--
(1) the mortgagor or the child, spouse, or parent of the mortgagor under the contract is not the tenant;
(2) the lease or tenancy was the result of an arms-length transaction; and
(3) the lease or tenancy requires the receipt of rent that is not substantially less than fair market rent for the property or the unit's rent is reduced or subsidized due to a Federal, State, or local subsidy.​
 

shujert

Junior Member
Resurrecting an old thread here. My current landlord has decided to allow the property to fall into foreclosure and has voluntarily stopped collecting rent. Does this constitute violation of my lease for non-payment? How will it affect my protection under the act?
 

FlyingRon

Senior Member
In California, the new owner is 100% liable for your security deposit (most likely the bank). Escrowing rent money is not necessary nor advised.

As other's have pointed out, you got move out timeframe protections as well.
 

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