CARES Act

5 posts

Does Federal Law Always Require 30 Days’ Notice?

The CARES Act requires thirty days’ notice for nonpayment eviction for rental properties covered by this law. Covered properties include Section 8 tenants, properties with federally-backed mortgages (FHA, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, etc.), and may apply in other situations. Whether the CARES Act applies to cases other than nonpayment, such as nuisance evictions, has been the subject of two Court of Appeals rulings in recent months. Division Two of the Washington Court of Appeals ruled that the CARES Act applies to covered properties for all eviction cases, regardless of grounds. Meanwhile, Division One ruled just the opposite and held that […]

Recent Changes in Landlord-Tenant Law

Landlord-tenant law of only a few years ago is almost unrecognizable today. Below is a bullet-point list of some of the more important developments. An article cannot list all the changes or analyze them in depth. Consult with an attorney about your circumstances. CARES Act The federal CARES Act applies to any property with a federally-backed loan (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, etc.) and any unit with a Section 8 tenant. The CARES Act may apply if any tenant in any unit is a Section 8 voucher tenant, if the owner received a mortgage forbearance, and other circumstances. Courts may require […]

Are Pay or Vacate Notices Now 30-Day Notices?

A recent Court of Appeals decision requires a 30-day notice to pay rent or vacate for any residential property with a federally-backed loan (FHA, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, etc.). The court was interpreting provisions of the federal CARES Act. Although state law requires only 14 days’ notice to pay rent or vacate, the court held that federal law preempts state law and requires 30 days’ notice if there is a federally-backed loan. The same statute applies to tenancies where the tenant receives Section 8 benefits. If the tenant being evicted is a Section 8 beneficiary, then a 30-day notice to […]

CARES Act Ruling

The CARES Act covers more than one in four rentals.[1] Contrary to a widely held misconception, provisions of the CARES Act applicable to rentals continue to apply and are not set to ever expire.[2] The CARES Act requires landlords to serve a 30-day notice before a tenant may be required to vacate. The language in the CARES Act does not require the landlord to provide an opportunity to cure. State law requires landlords to serve a 14-day notice to pay rent or vacate. The precise language is mandated by state law and provides that the tenant must either pay the […]

The CARES Act may impose additional requirements for landlords serving notices to terminate a tenancy. If your rental property is covered by the CARES Act you must give at least 30 days’ notice to your tenant for nonpayment of rent. Whether this applies to other types of notices (such as nuisance, for example) is an open legal question with court results varying. The CARES Act is the subject of a pending Washington Court of Appeals case. As the CARES Act is a federal law, it has been and will continue to be litigated in other court systems around the country. […]