Legal Question in Real Estate Law in New Mexico

Tenant dies

Our tenant died and members of his family wish to ''go through'' the house. Don't we need to be contacted by the legal party handling his estate before we allow anyone to take personal items? Would his estate be financially responsible for the remainder of the lease, utility bills and miscellaneous charges related to clearing out the house?


Asked on 11/19/07, 8:16 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

Bryan Whipple Bryan R. R. Whipple, Attorney at Law

Re: Tenant dies

In California, death of a tenant does not terminate the lease, and the estate of the deceased tenant is liable for rent for the remainder of the lease term if the landlord files a timely claim against the estate.

Since the executor(s) or administrator(s) (collectively, the "representative") is in charge of all the deceased's property, the representative is the one who now has the deceased tenant's rights to enter and occupy the leasehold. Random members of the family, even the spouse, parents, children, siblings, etc. legally do not have a "right" to enter without the representative's permission. The landlord retains the usual landlord rights to enter a leased unit for proper purposes, such as to make emergency repairs, to show it to successor tenants, etc., and on proper notice.

New Mexico law may vary, and we should hope that a NM attorney will provide an answer as well.

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Answered on 11/19/07, 8:41 pm


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