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DRAFT FOR ATTORNEY REVIEW — NOT FINAL

JW, LLC v. Ayer and Martell, 197 Vt. 118 (2014)

Citation
JW, LLC v. Ayer and Martell, 197 Vt. 118 (2014)
Parent Document
JW, LLC v. Ayer and Martell, 197 Vt. 118 (2014)
Jurisdiction
Vermont (state)
Effective Date
2014-07-18

Other Sections in This Document (61)

Full Text

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¶ 18. Turning to the statutory language, it is evident that 12 V.S.A. § 4854a pertains exactly to the situation presented in this case. The statute is included in the chapter entitled “Ejectment,” and a subchapter labeled “Superior Court Ejectment.” The title of the section is “Property of tenant remaining on premises after eviction.” 12 V.S.A. § 4854a. The language states that after fifteen days from when a writ of possession is served, a landlord “may dispose of any personal property remaining in a dwelling unit or leased premises without notice or liability to the tenant or owner of the personal property.” Id. § 4854a(a). 2 The only exception is if *126 a court stays execution of the writ, id. § 4854a(b), which is not applicable here.