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What Are the Steps in an Eviction? (Overview of Eviction Process)
Introduction
Step 1: Eviction Notice
Step 2: Filing A Summons and
Complaint
Step 3: Motion For Payment Of
Rent Into Court
Step 4: Motion For Summary
Judgment
Step 5: Discovery
Step 6: Trial, Also Called A
"Merits Hearing"
Step 7: The Courts Decision
Settling the Case and
Preventing the Eviction
Really Important Things to Remember
About All Evictions
Important Rules About
Your Home's Condition and Withholding Rent
Where Can I Get Legal Help?
I Don't Have a Lawyer. Where Can I Get Help Filling out Forms to Respond to the Eviction?
Introduction
This is what happens during the process of eviction in
Vermont, it provides information of how the court
eviction process works so a tenant will have a better
understanding of his/her rights and what to expect if a
tenant is being evicted from a house, apartment, mobile home
or motel that he/she rents from the owner of a rental
unit.
The rules are different if the park owner is evicting
you from a lot in a mobile home park. For more information about
your rights as a mobile home park residents, CVOEO publishes
Mobile Home Park Residents: A Guide To Your Rights
.
IMPORTANT: A landlord may NEVER force a tenant to
leave the apartment at any time in eviction
process--such as: locking a tenant out, turning off heat,
water or other utilities, or removing a tenants belongings.
For information on what to do if this occurs
or if a landlord threatens to take such action click here.
STEP ONE: Eviction Notice
To start any eviction, a landlord must give a written eviction
notice to the tenant. This notice is often called a "Notice of
Termination of Tenancy" or a "Notice to Quit." The type of notice
the landlord is required to give a tenant depends upon the grounds
for the eviction. These are the grounds to start a legal process
of eviction:
Eviction for Nonpayment of Rent
If the landlord's reason for evicting the tenant is that the
tenant has not paid some or all of the rent owed the eviction
notice must be in writing. The date given in the notice to pay
back rent or leave (the "termination date") must be at least 14
days from the date you receive the notice. The notice does not
have to be served by a sheriff or other law enforcement officer.
Eviction For Criminal Activity
If the landlord's reason for evicting the tenant is that the tenant has engaged
in criminal activity that affects the health or safety of other residents,
the landlord must give the tenant notice in writing. The date to leave the
premises given in the notice must be at least 14 days from the date you receive the
notice. The notice does not have to be served by a sheriff or other law enforcement officer.
Eviction "For Cause"
Eviction for violating some other aspect of the lease
agreement other than nonpayment of rent.
If the landlord's reason for evicting the tenant is that the
tenant broke some other part of the rental agreement other then
paying rent, the eviction notice may be sent by ordinary mail or
hand delivered to the tenant. The notice must give the tenant at
least 30 days notice from the date you receive it to the date you
are asked to leave the premises.
Eviction for "No Cause"
If you do not have a written rental agreement with your landlord
or you had one but it is now expired, your landlord can legally
evict you for no reason at all. The eviction notice may be sent
by ordinary mail or hand delivered to the tenant.
If rent is payable on a monthly basis and the tenant has
resided on the premises for two years or less, the
notice must give the tenant at least 60 days notice from
the date it is received to the time that the letter tells
the tenant to leave the premises.
If the tenant has resided at the premises continuously for
longer than two years, the tenant is entitled to 90 days advance
notice before the termination date. If rent is payable on a weekly
basis the notice must provide the tenant with 21 days notice
before the termination date.
Attention Burlington Tenants: Eviction for "No Cause"
If there is no written rental agreement, the tenant lives in Burlington and pays rent monthly,
the tenant is entitled to more advance notice:
If the tenant has lived on the premises for two years or less, the landlord must give at least
90 days notice to evict for no cause.
If the tenant has
lived in the same place continuously for more than two years, the landlord must give the tenant
120 days notice to evict for no cause.
The longer notice periods apply to Burlington tenants only.
STEP TWO: Filing A Summons
and Complaint
If the date stated in the termination notice or notice to quit
has passed, the landlord may file a Complaint for Eviction in
Superior Court to evict a tenant. A Summons and Complaint asks
the court for relief and hopes the court will order that the
tenant leave. It may ask the court to order the tenant to pay
back rent that the landlord believes he is owed.
A copy of the Summons and Complaint for Eviction must
be "served" (delivered) to you by a sheriff, law enforcement
officer or constable. A tenant must answer the Complaint
in writing; within 20 days beginning the day after it was
served by the Sheriff. A tenant answers by filing a
written response to the complaint in the Superior Court
where the landlord filed the Complaint.
IMPORTANT: It is extremely important to respond in
writing before the deadline. If a tenant responds in time,
he/she will have a chance to tell his/her side of the story
to the court (facts and evidence that promotes the tenants right
to a fair hearing). It also gives the tenant some time before
the court decides a tenant must move out.
To go directly to the forms a tenant can fill in and file with
the court to answer the Summons and Complaint, Click Here.
What Happens If A Tenant Does Not Answer the Complaint?
If the tenant fails to file a written response to the
Complaint within the 20-day deadline, the court will
"issue" (make) a "Default Judgment" which is a court
decision that the tenant loses the entire case automatically
because the he/she failed to respond in time.
Next, the landlord can receive a "Writ of Possession"
from the court. "Writ of Possession" is a court order
giving possession of the rental unit back to the landlord,
with this court order the landlord can have a sheriff remove
the tenant from the rental unit in as little as 5 days.
If you have already received a Default Judgment, you should talk to
a lawyer as soon as possible. In some cases, you may still be able to
stop the eviction.
STEP THREE: Motion for
Payment Of Rent Into Court (Only if the tenant owes back rent!)
If a tenant owes the landlord back rent, the landlord
may request that the court order the tenant pay to the court his/her
future monthly rent as it comes due as well as any back rent due since the Summons and Complaint
was served on the tenant.
The tenant will pay his/her rent to the court clerk's
office each month. The court clerk will hold the rent money until the eviction case is decided.
When the case is over and the judge makes a decision
about whether the tenant will be evicted, the judge
will also decide how the rent money that the tenant paid to the court clerk
will be distributed. A copy
of the landlord's request (as stated above) must be sent
to the tenant through regular mail by the landlord or his
lawyer. The tenant will be notified by the court of a date
and time of the hearing.
This is the hearing that decides if a tenant will have to pay
his/her monthly rent to the court clerk. A tenant will likely
be required to pay his/her future rent to the court, even if
the tenant has been withholding rent for legal reasons. This
hearing is only a hearing about whether the tenant has to pay
rent to the clerk.
IT IS NOT a hearing which will decide if a
tenant is to be evicted or who wins the case. At the end of the
hearing, the court will make a decision about the rent. The
court's order will most likely say that a tenant has to pay back rent due
since the landlord served the complaint on the tenant and
his/her full rent on the first day of each month to the court
clerk until the case is over.
IF a tenant receives ReachUp and he/she cannot make the
full rent payment on the first day of
the month, the tenant can ask the court to allow him to pay
half of the rent payment on the first day of the month and
the other half on the sixteenth day of the month. In order
for a tenant to be able to do this, he/she must file a written
request for permission within 10 days from the day the tenant
receives the landlord's Motion and send a copy to the landlord
or his lawyer.
IF you don't owe your landlord any back rent but the
landlord has asked that you be ordered to pay your rent into
court anyway, you can probably prevent the court from
ordering you to pay. But a tenant must file a written
request to the Court within 10 days of receiving the motion and send a
copy to the landlord or his lawyer.
What happens if a tenant does not pay?
If a tenant is ordered
to pay rent to the court clerk and he/she does not
follow a court's written order exactly (e.g., tenant pays only
part of the money on the day he/she is ordered, or tenant
pays all of the money but he/she pays a day late), the landlord
can get an immediate Writ of Possession to remove the tenant
within as little as 5 business days. The court clerk does not
have the authority to make special exceptions for anyone.
STEP FOUR (Not every tenant
will get one of these): Motion For Summary Judgment
In some cases, a landlord may file a Motion for Summary Judgment
after you have answered the Summons and Complaint. This document
is a request by the landlord for the court to decide the case in
the landlord's favor automatically, without ever hearing the
facts of the tenants' case.
If a tenant wants a chance to tell his/her side of the
story, the tenant must file a written
response to a motion for Summary Judgment within 30 days,
beginning the day after the tenant receives it. A tenant
must send a copy of his/her response to the landlord and/or
his/her lawyer.
Any tenant who receives a Motion for Summary Judgment
should call Vermont Legal Aid right away for legal assistance.
What Happens If A Tenant Does Not Respond?
If a tenant does not respond to a Motion for Summary Judgment
within the 30-day deadline, the court will decide that the
landlord wins automatically and will give the landlord an
immediate judgment in his/her favor for the amount of money
the landlord says the tenant owes, along with the Writ of
Possession allowing him to have the tenant be removed from
his/her home by a Sheriff within 5 business days. If this
happens, a tenant will not get to explain the facts of his/her
case to the judge.
STEP FIVE: Discovery
In some cases, after the tenant has responded to the Summons
and Complaint some landlords' lawyers send written questions
about the case to the tenant asking for the tenant to answer
them in writing within 30 days. The landlords' lawyer could
also ask the tenant to answer questions under oath outside
of Court. This process of asking for answers to questions
is called "discovery." A tenant should contact Vermont Legal
Aid for legal advice and assistance before answering these
questions.
STEP SIX: Trial (Also Called
A "Merits Hearing")
If a tenant files a written response to the Complaint and
any other Motion sent or served to him/her within the deadline
for responding, it may be several weeks before the court sets
a date for trial on the eviction of a tenant (sometimes this
is called a "Merits Hearing").
A tenant will receive written notice from the court
stating the date and time of the trial.
This date is when the court will decide if the tenant must
move out and whether either the tenant or the landlord owes
money to either party. This is the place where a tenant can
explain his/her side of the story (facts of the tenant's case).
A tenant may bring witnesses or evidence with him/her to
help prove his/her case.
STEP SEVEN: The Court's
Decision
After the court has heard both sides of the case (tenant
and the landlords), the court will make a decision whether
the tenant must leave their residence and if the tenant
owes money to the landlord or whether the landlord money
to the tenant. Usually the court will make its decision at
that time. At times, the court will make a decision later
and will mail its decision to both sides a short time after
the hearing.
The court's final decision is called a "Judgment."
If the court decides that a tenant must leave, the court will
issue a "Writ of Possession" which is a court order which
gives the landlord the right to ask the Sheriff to force
the tenant out of his/her home. If a tenant is served with a
Writ of Possession, the Sheriff will force the tenant out
within 5 business days (not counting weekends and holidays),
from the time he served the Writ of Possession to the tenant
(as explained above).
Settling the Case and
Preventing the Eviction
Sometimes it is possible to stop an eviction before it gets
decided at trial by negotiating a settlement agreement
(sometimes called a "stipulation") with the landlord.
An example of a settlement might be a repayment plan in
which a tenant agrees to pay his/her monthly rent plus an
extra sum of money every month to pay back rent owed to the
landlord. In exchange, the landlord may sometimes lower
the amount of money that you must pay back and drop the
eviction case.
Another way to stop an eviction for nonpayment of rent
from happening (even if the landlord still wants to evict
the tenant) is for the tenant to pay all the money owed
before a final judgment in the case. If the tenant pays
to the court all the money owed for back rent, plus the
filing fee for the eviction, and any fee the landlord
paid the Sheriff to serve papers to the tenant, the
tenant will be able to stop the eviction from going any further.
IMPORTANT: If a tenant is being evicted and he/she is
trying to settle their case in one of these ways, a tenant
should ask a lawyer for help before paying his/her money to
anyone.
REALLY IMPORTANT THINGS
TO REMEMBER ABOUT ALL EVICTIONS
1. Just about every court paper you receive from the
landlord or his lawyer requires a written answer even
if the papers themselves do not tell a tenant to answer.
2. Everything that requires a written answer or response
has a time deadline which can be as short as 10 days or
as long as 30 days, so it is very important to pay attention
to deadlines and ask for legal help soon after a tenant
receives papers. The papers themselves almost never tell
a tenant that there is a time limit for answering even
if there is deadline.
3. The worst thing you can do is ignore court papers.
Even if a tenant is afraid of what may happen, it is
far easier to prevent an eviction and for a tenant to
hold onto his right to tell his/her side of the story
if the tenant deals with it and calls for help immediately.
4. Evictions and legal rights are difficult to understand
if a tenant does not have legal advice from an attorney.
Not every tenant's situation is identical, and judges don't
always decide eviction cases the same way even if the cases
seem similar to one another. It is not possible to predict
exactly what a judge will do about a specific case but
legal advice can often inform a tenant of the likely
outcome of his/her case. It is best for a tenant to
explain his/her specific situation to an attorney
instead of relying on something else a tenant may have
heard about a eviction that is not his/her own eviction
process.
A tenant should always seek legal advice for eviction
process if she or he can.
Important Rules About
Your Home's Condition and Withholding Rent:
The Landlords Obligation
Vermont law says that a landlord is required to keep the
home or apartment in a condition that is "habitable" which
means safe, clean and fit for human habitation, including
adequate and reliable utility services, safe water, sewage
disposal, etc.
The Tenant's Rights
If the landlord fails to comply with his duty of habitability,
the first thing you must do is give the landlord "actual
notice" of the problems. You should do this by sending the
landlord a written notice of the problem and request that
the landlord fix them. The landlord will be considered to
have "actual notice" if he gets a written notice about the
problem from a tenant. Notice from a governmental entity
or a qualified independent inspector may also be considered
actual notice, but the law is unclear on this point. To be
sure, a tenant ought to give his or her own notice in writing.
If the owner has received actual notice and fails to make
repairs within a reasonable time, and his doing this
materially (seriously) affects health and safety, the
tenant may do any of the following:
1. Withhold payment of rent during the period of noncompliance
(after the owner has had a reasonable time to fix the
problem and has not).
2. Obtain injunctive relief (get a court order forcing
the owner to make the repairs).
3. Recover damages, costs and reasonable attorneys fees.
4. Terminate the rental agreement upon reasonable notice.
Anyone who is considering withholding rent should call
Vermont Legal Aid for advice about his or her specific
case before doing so. Withholding rent is always risky
because even if a judge decides that you had a legal
right to withhold, a judge could still order you to
pay to the owner part of the money you withheld. If
you do not have it all when the court makes a decision
you will lose your case and will most likely be evicted.
If you withhold rent you must not spend the rent that
you withhold.
Where Can I Get Legal Help?
If you have a low income and want legal help with your case,
call Vermont
Legal Aid at (800) 889-2047. If Vermont Legal Aid cannot
represent you and you are income-eligible, they will refer your
case to Legal Services Law Line of Vermont and a lawyer
from Law Line will give you legal advice and help you
in representing yourself, including helping you making written
responses.
If you are not low-income, you can hire an attorney by
contacting the
Vermont Bar Association's Lawyer Referral Service at
(800) 639-7036.
Help Filling out Forms to Respond to the Eviction
To help you fill out the forms you need to Answer a Complaint, file a Counterclaim or Motion to Dismiss, respond
to a landlord's request to have you pay rent into court or ask the court to reopen a case and set aside a default
judgment, there is an online Interview that guides you through these forms step by step. Be sure to disable any popup blocker
on your computer before using this tool.
Vermont Law Help, 2008.
This is a website about Vermont law. We give this information
as a public service. It is not legal advice. We are not acting as your
lawyer.
Always consult a lawyer, if you can, before taking legal action.