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Edited on Wed Apr-08-09 12:32 PM by haele
Depending on the state, after two weeks late, lots of places put their own lock on the unit for non-payment. Say, you've been in an accident or had to go out of state for a month or two due to an emergency and can't get a reliable payment plan in place, they can lock you out of your unit after two weeks, then sell it off once you're 30 days late with only a half-hearted attempt to get ahold of you. All they have to do is pay for the notice in the paper two weeks before the auction and to file the court documents for the auction, and they've got your stuff.
The cheap places are notorious for that sort of dealing in California - 10 years ago, a former rentmate of mine lost everything - she had just gone through a divorce, put everything she had in in a large storage unit waiting to get into a place of her own (including some valuable inheritance from her grandparents) - after she got into a serious auto accident a week before the payment was due and was in ICU for almost 3 weeks. They had put a lock on her unit by the time she got out of ICU. She didn't have the ability to get up and send the payment in; she fell one month behind, the late fee was the same amount as her month's rent, and the storage site wouldn't work with her, snowballing the amount owed to over $500 within 45 days after her accident. A week after that, they had their standard quarterly auction, and her storage unit was auctioned off for around $700. She had close to $50K worth of stuff in that unit, three or four generations worth of stuff, that she couldn't save - she couldn't even get someone to remove it for her once she was able to start communicating with people.
Some states are nice enough to force them to wait another 30 days to 60 days after the 30 day lockout and notice before they can sell, so you've got 90 days to come up with a payment or place the unit in a probate estate that will pay it off. And they still don't need to try to work with you; depending on the manager or owner, they can accept partial payments to catch up after a glitch, or they can require you to come up with the entire amount owed plus late fees before they accept the payment and release the unit back to you.
Haele
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