HCBA Lawyer Magazine Vol. 28, No. 2 | Page 46

REPRESEnTing SERviCEMEMBERS in SCRA CASES Military & Veterans Affairs Committee Chairs: Alexandra Srsic – Bay Area Legal Services, Inc. & David Veenstra - Hunter Law, P.A. The SCRA literally alters the terms of written contracts when those contracts come under the T he Servicemembers Civil Relief Act 1 protects active duty members of the Armed Forces against a variety of civil proceedings, such as evictions, termination of installment sales contracts, mortgage foreclosures, and sales of stored goods to pay for storage liens. The Act is not limited in its application to servicemembers who have been involuntarily called to active duty. It applies to all servicemembers (including Reservists and Guardsmen) on active duty, whether they volunteered, enlisted, or were brought onto active duty kicking and screaming — and not just members serving in combat zones or outside the continental United States. To gain the Act’s protections against eviction, 2 self-help repossessions of automobiles and other property, 3 mortgage foreclosures, 4 and enforcement of storage liens, 5 a servicemember generally must be prepared to show that he or she has been “materially affected” by the call to military service. Although the phrase protection of the Act. © Can Stock Photo / Stockagogo “materially affected” is not defined anywhere in the Act, it has evolved through usage to generally mean that the servicemember and his or her family have less overall income after entering military service than he or she did “in the civilian world,” either before enlisti