§ 8.01-130.10.When goods of a sublessee may be removed from leased premises.
Chapter 3. Actions · Article 13.1. Warrants in Distress · Last amended 2019 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-130.10
Plain-English Summary
Section 8.01-130.10 carves out a specific rule for goods that belong to a sublessee rather than the head tenant, limiting how § 8.01-130.9 applies to them. A sublessee, someone who buys from the sublessee, or a creditor whose deed of trust, mortgage, or other lien on the sublessee’s goods was created after those goods were brought onto the leased premises, can remove the goods by paying whatever rent the sublessee contracted to pay that is already in arrears, and securing the rest, up to the same caps as § 8.01-130.9 — six months’ rent for residential premises in a city, town, or residential subdivision, and twelve months’ rent for farming or agricultural land.
Where the sublessee’s goods are taken under legal process against the sublessee, the mechanics track § 8.01-130.9 as well: the officer executing the process pays the sublessee’s arrears out of the sale proceeds, then sells enough of the remaining goods on credit, taking secured bonds from the purchasers and delivering them to whoever is entitled to receive them.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is § 8.01-130.10 different from § 8.01-130.9?
Section 8.01-130.9 sets the general rule for purchasers and lienholders removing a tenant’s goods. Section 8.01-130.10 applies that same framework specifically to goods belonging to a sublessee, measured against the sublessee’s own rent.
Whose rent arrears matter when a sublessee’s goods are being removed from the premises?
The rent the sublessee contracted to pay, not the head tenant’s rent under the primary lease. Section 8.01-130.10 ties the payment obligation to what the sublessee owes.
Is the six- or twelve-month cap the same as it is for the head tenant’s goods?
Yes. Section 8.01-130.10 applies the same caps as § 8.01-130.9: six months’ rent for residential, non-farm premises and twelve months’ rent for farming or agricultural premises.
What if the sublessee’s goods are seized through a court process rather than a private sale?
Under § 8.01-130.10, the officer executing the process pays the sublessee’s rent arrears from the sale proceeds and sells enough remaining goods on credit, taking secured bonds from the purchasers.
Can a creditor of the sublessee remove collateral from the leased premises without paying anything to the landlord?
No, if the creditor’s lien on the sublessee’s goods was created after those goods came onto the premises. Section 8.01-130.10 requires paying arrears and securing the rest before removal.
Amendment History
Code 1919, § 5525; 1922, p. 863; 1932, p. 697; Code 1950, § 55-234; 2019, c. 712.