Legal Question in Credit and Debt Law in Virginia
Break of apartment lease
I had a 12 month lease with an apartment community in 2004. Due to financial difficulty I was unable to pay the last 2 months of the lease. I left without notice leaving items in the apartment. I am now being garnished for past due rent and damages/cleanup of the apartment. By law am I suppose to recieve notice that they are going to garnish me. I thought usually an opportunity to make payment arrangements is given. If this is not legal, what can i do to stop future garnighments?
1 Answer from Attorneys
Re: Break of apartment lease
YES, you are supposed to get notice... except.
No one can garnish anyone without first winning
a lawsuit against them. Therefore, there must
have been a lawsuit (on a Warrant in Debt form
which is a short-cut format for a lawsuit).
The Warrant in Debt must have been 'served' at
an old address where you used to live. For
a lawsuit to be valid, you must be 'served' with
the lawsuit. However, Virginia allows the
lawsuit to be 'posted' on your door where you
live. The TROUBLE is that frequently people have
moved, and it is NOT the door where you live any
more.
You need to go to the court and examine the
court file. Look to see what address was used
for the lawsuit. If you did not live there AT
THE TIME that the lawsuit was 'served' there,
you can file a MOTION TO VACATE the judgment.
However... you have to be prepared to show the
judge that not only (a) you did not live there
at the time, but (b) a reasonable person could
have DISCOVERED your actual address if they had
bothered to loook. (For example, they could have
asked the post office for your forwarding address
or looked you up in the phone book. Be creative.
Don't give up easily on this one. Give it some
thought. Or, if it is obvious that you did not
live at the old address any more, that works,
such as they used the address where they KNEW
you had moved out.)
As a result, the judgment can be vacated, and
made null and void. (The risk is that the
case might then be set for trial and you will
have to argue against owing the money.)
A garnishment can only happen after a judgment
is entered. There again you must recieve notice.
The fact that you did not receive notice indicates
that they are using your old address and do not
know your current address.