Related Articles: Commercial Landlord
Tenants Right's: What Happens to the Tenant -- Ant the Security
Deposit -- After Foreclosure?
Say you're a tenant. You put up a hefty security deposit, and
have dutifully paid rent for months or years. Suddenly, you
find out the property was sold at a foreclosure sale and the
new owner wants you to move out. What's worse, he won't refund
your security deposit.
Or, say you're the purchaser at a foreclosure sale. Now you
are getting stacks of letters from the prior owner's tenants,
who are clamoring to get their security deposits back. What
is the law?
Generally, a tenant has no legal right to possession after foreclosure
under a Deed of Trust. This is because the purchaser at the
foreclosure sale usually gets title that is superior to the
possessory rights of a tenant. The tenant's right to possession
will only be superior if his lease was recorded before the Deed
of Trust was recorded. In Virginia, all interests arising after
the interest foreclosed upon are destroyed when the property
is sold at a foreclosure sale.
Accordingly, the new owner may choose to evict existing tenants
or allow them to sign a new lease agreement. But what about
security deposits? Virginia case law seems to indicate that
the tenant will lose his right to get the deposit back once
the property is sold at a foreclosure sale. This may come as
a rude shock to many commercial tenants whose security deposits
are in the tens of thousands of dollars.
A commercial tenant can protect his interests by recording the
lease and by posting a Letter of Credit in lieu of a security
deposit.
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