Yesterday Governor Inslee signed a bill that establishes a just cause eviction law throughout Washington state. The Washington just cause eviction law is largely similar to just cause eviction laws in Seattle, Federal Way, and Burien. Washington residential landlords may no longer serve a “20-day” no-cause notice to terminate a tenancy. There is an exception when the landlord shares housing with the tenant. Landlords may terminate a tenancy and the end of the initial lease term with 60 days’ notice. To evict because the landlord wishes to sell or if the landlord or an immediate family member intends to live […]
Monthly Archives: May 2021
Under the Washington residential eviction moratorium hotel/motel guests who stay at least fourteen days may not be evicted (with some general exceptions applicable to all tenants). The Washington eviction moratorium ends June 30. Under a new law now in effect, a hotel or motel may serve a guest who has stayed for thirty days or more with a seven-day eviction notice. After the seven-day period the guest is not a tenant for the purposes of the Residential Landlord-Tenant Act. The law is silent as to whether the tenant must be removed under the unlawful detainer statute (essentially a non-residential eviction). […]
Under Governor Inslee’s statewide eviction moratorium Washington landlords may only evict residential tenants because a tenant poses an immediate and serious threat, the owner wishes to sell, or the owner wishes to live in the rental property. Landlord attorneys and most local Washington courts have held that the Center for Disease Control (CDC) eviction moratorium does not prevent eviction under the Washington state moratorium exceptions. Tenant attorney have appealed this issue, and there are two cases pending with the Washington State Supreme Court on the issue of whether the CDC eviction moratorium supersedes Governor Inslee’s eviction moratorium exceptions. Today a […]