The Commercial Eviction Process in Vermont
Understand the Vermont commercial eviction process, the risks of self-help, and why ejectment actions through Superior Court are the safest approach.
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The Vermont Judiciary's official eviction guide explicitly states: "This web page provides information about the eviction process for residential properties. This page does not cover commercial properties."
This means commercial landlords must handle a less defined legal market, relying on their lease agreement and the ejectment procedures established under 12 V.S.A. § 4851 et seq.
Notice Requirements: Lease-Driven
The residential multi-tiered notice system (14-day, 30-day, 60-day) under § 4467 does not apply to commercial tenancies. The notice period and process for commercial evictions are determined entirely by the lease.
Well-Drafted Leases A strong commercial lease will specify:
- The exact number of days the tenant has to cure a rent default (e.g., 10 business days).
- The exact number of days for non-monetary defaults (e.g., 30 days).
- Whether a "Notice of Default" or a formal "Notice to Quit" is required.
Poorly Drafted or Silent Leases
If the lease doesn't specify a notice period, the landlord must still provide "reasonable" notice before commencing legal action. Vermont courts determine what constitutes "reasonable" on a case-by-case basis.
Filing an Ejectment Action
If the tenant fails to cure the default within the lease-specified period, the landlord files an ejectment action in the Vermont Superior Court, Civil Division.
This is a formal civil lawsuit:
- The tenant is served with a summons and complaint.
- Under the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure, the tenant typically has 21 days to file an answer.
- The court schedules a hearing or trial.
- If the landlord prevails, the court issues a Writ of Possession, and the local sheriff executes the physical eviction.
The Extreme Danger of Self-Help
Some commercial leases contain a "right of re-entry" clause allowing the landlord to simply change the locks and seize the premises without going to court. While theoretically enforceable in commercial contexts (unlike residential, where it is flatly illegal under § 4463), self-help evictions in Vermont are extraordinarily risky.
If any "breach of the peace" occurs, or if the landlord damages the tenant's inventory, equipment, or trade fixtures during the lockout, the landlord is exposed to:
- Constructive eviction claims.
- Damages for conversion of property (essentially, stealing the tenant's business assets).
- Potential tort liability for lost business profits.
The safest practice is always to seek a court-ordered eviction.
How Landager Helps
Landager provides institutional-grade commercial default tracking. When a tenant misses a payment, the platform automatically calculates the lease-specific cure period, generates the correct default notice, and tracks the expiration date through to the court filing deadline-ensuring you never attempt a premature eviction that could be dismissed on procedural grounds.
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