by Grubbie » Wed Mar 10, 2010 12:53 am
This happened to me and my now wife last year (Jan 09).
Our lease was ending in Feb and we decided to just move out as we didn't want to deal with the stress. From the research I did (might not be 100% accurate) is the following
You are still required to pay rent, since you are paying rent to the actually owner (until it is foreclosed)
Once the house is auctioned off, the lease is voided (different if it was sold, the lease is still valid, but at auction the lease is voided) - note you might want to take a look into this as I could be wrong. Once it is sold at auction, you have two weeks required by law before they can kick you out - You can all the company on the notice of default and ask them, they will be helpful. I'm assuming it was a notice of default, in 30 days you will get the Notice of Trustee sale which can't have the auction for 90 or 120 after the notice of trustee sale.
For the place I was renting, they defaulted in Sept 08, we got the notice of default Jan 09. Notice of trustee sale followed in Feb 09. The auction was scheduled for May, postponed to June, July, August, September. The September auction was cancelled due to bankruptcy the day before the auction. This whole time the place was on the market, and sometime in the last two months went pending (still not owned by the bank).
If you are month to month, I recommend just moving on. Spend time (no rush for at least 120 days) to find a new place. Also talk to your landlord, tell them you got the notice of default. By law, they can't keep your deposit (if you are in Seattle). If they do, you can take them to small claims court (I'm not a lawyer, but this is what I remember reading in the Seattle tenant rules. The deposit is supposed to be in a separate account). Just don't stress out about it, it sucks and is a shock but in the end moving will be the best bet.
In my case, the landlords felt bad (we had emailed them the night before the first notice asking for a 7month extension to our lease). We moved out 2 months later and got our deposit back in full. No hassle and they even gave us a good recommendation to our new landlords.