This is official notification that you, the Tenant, have three days to pay the rent or vacate the premises (a landlord can't give you three days' notice just to vacate). If you don't vacate the premises, or you don't catch up on your rent (including any late fees if applicable) by then, the landlord can file eviction proceedings against you (take you to court and ask a judge to force you out of your home).
After the notice has been served according to law and the statutory time period has passed, the landlord can initiate an unlawful detainer lawsuit to have you evicted.
I got a 3 day notice to vacate the property
You are given the allotted amount of time given on the notice to vacate the premises. If you do not vacate the premises then the landlord can start eviction proceedings against you.
If your spouse was the owner of the property it will pass to her heirs according to the provisions in her Will. You should be given ample notice and time to move if they want you to vacate the premises. You should only remove your own property, not any property that belonged to your spouse.You should also check with an attorney to determine if you have any rights of inheritance under the laws in your jurisdiction.If your spouse was the owner of the property it will pass to her heirs according to the provisions in her Will. You should be given ample notice and time to move if they want you to vacate the premises. You should only remove your own property, not any property that belonged to your spouse.You should also check with an attorney to determine if you have any rights of inheritance under the laws in your jurisdiction.If your spouse was the owner of the property it will pass to her heirs according to the provisions in her Will. You should be given ample notice and time to move if they want you to vacate the premises. You should only remove your own property, not any property that belonged to your spouse.You should also check with an attorney to determine if you have any rights of inheritance under the laws in your jurisdiction.If your spouse was the owner of the property it will pass to her heirs according to the provisions in her Will. You should be given ample notice and time to move if they want you to vacate the premises. You should only remove your own property, not any property that belonged to your spouse.You should also check with an attorney to determine if you have any rights of inheritance under the laws in your jurisdiction.
If there is no lease involved, and there are no violations of the terms of the lease or agreement, the landlord has to give at least 30 days of notice before the next rent is due, for the tenant to vacate the premises. If there is a lease involved and there are no violations of the terms of the lease, the landlord must wait until the end of the lease term in order to ask tenant to vacate the premises. If the tenant does not vacate the premises after proper notice is given that the landlord must initiate eviction proceedings to force the tenant out
If an eviction notice has been given to you, the proper process is that a court date would be set. If you have a hardship such as a newborn baby or taking care of a terminally ill relative, the court may grant you the permission to stay. If the court decides that you were negligent on paying your rent, you will be given at least a 30 day notice to vacate.
When a rental property is under foreclosure, the landlord still has the right to collect rent, including the right to file evictions, until the mortgage lender takes possession of the property. When this happens the tenant will be given notice of proper instructions on how and where to pay rent, or to vacate the premises if applicable.
It sounds like some local 'landlord/tenant' law designed to protect both the lessor and the lessee. You've been given notice to vacate the premises within a certain reasonable amount of time - now it's up to you. You can either appeal to court giving good reason why you should not be evicted (or your lease terminated), or comply with the vacate notice.
Yes! If its for back rent maybe not if you pay it. Other wise YES!
It partially depends on why you are being asked to vacate... For instance, have you missed any rental payments? Were you served a court notice at some point by your landlord? If you have a lease and are current with your payments, then I would definitely contact the attorney and advise them that they are breaking your contract. If you have been evicted by a court, then you only have the goodwill of the landlord to stay longer than the 10 days notice given.
A 30 day notice is simply a notice that you will vacate in about 30 days. It does not exempt you from paying your rent on time.
Generally, if you are the owner you should be prepared before the foreclosure sale. You will be given notice of the time and date of the foreclosure sale. When the foreclosure sale takes place and the property is sold you will no longer have the right to enter the premises. You should remove your personal belongings before the sale.
Yes--if 24 hour notice is all that is required by your state (unless you would like to be on the losing end of a lawsuit initiated by your unruly tenant). Keep in mind that you may only show the unit once a notice to vacate has been issued (at least in WA), so you might contact a landlord advocacy group in your area for details.
The married person has the individual right to the use and possession of the property for the duration of their natural life. When they die the life estate is extinguished. If they had been inhabiting in the life estate property with a spouse the spouse must vacate the property upon the death of the life tenant.The married person has the individual right to the use and possession of the property for the duration of their natural life. When they die the life estate is extinguished. If they had been inhabiting in the life estate property with a spouse the spouse must vacate the property upon the death of the life tenant.The married person has the individual right to the use and possession of the property for the duration of their natural life. When they die the life estate is extinguished. If they had been inhabiting in the life estate property with a spouse the spouse must vacate the property upon the death of the life tenant.The married person has the individual right to the use and possession of the property for the duration of their natural life. When they die the life estate is extinguished. If they had been inhabiting in the life estate property with a spouse the spouse must vacate the property upon the death of the life tenant.