Legal Question in Landlord & Tenant Law in Virginia
Can i sell her stuff to cover my losses?
1 roommate was given her 2 months notice like we had agreed to & it's all in paperwork. she was responsible for all those bills for those 2 remaining months & she knew that. i have given her other notices of failure to pay & told her i was going to sell the rest of her furniture that she left in the apartment. it's now been here for over 3 months total & at least 1 month after the actual 2 month notice was over because it is in my residence & is now in my name when can i legally sell it all to cover my losses?
1 Answer from Attorneys
Re: Can i sell her stuff to cover my losses?
Generally speaking, there is NO right to simply
keep someone's belongings and sell them to
satisfy a debt. People talk about that all the
time, including landlords and others. Normally,
you must go to court and get a judgment from the
court first, and then you must go through legal
process to "attach" or "garnish" or "seize"
property under a court order.
However, your situation is different.
If someone ABANDONS their property in YOUR
apartment (or whatever location), so that you
are left storing them, then I think there comes
a point at which you are not obligated to keep
STORING someone else's property at YOUR expense
(or burden, if no actual expense).
So they key thing here is whether she has
effectively ABANDONED her belongings and dumped
them on you.
To the extent that the property has been
abandoned, it is in some sense similar to a gift
to you, and you can do whatever you want with it.
How do we know if it has been abandoned? How
long must you wait? This really depends upon
the facts of the situation, and there is no
magic rule.
Therefore, to protect yourself, I think you
should make VERY clear and certain, without any
doubt, that you have warned her to come and take
it away or put it in storage or you will dispose
of it, and you give her a reasonable amount of
time to get that done. (Like 10 days or two
weeks.) If you can prove that you have given
her actual, CLEAR NOTICE, and she has still left
it with you, then she has abandoned it.
If you are confident that you can PROVE that
you have already given such notice, you might not
need to wait any longer.
But remember that in a legal dispute, people
will deny what you think is obvious. So you
should probably have it in WRITING or have a
witness to a conversation, so that it can't be
denied.
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