Most people know if they have been evicted. It is a court procedure and they receive a summons. If this is not the case, it Is possible to check with the court in which you believe the eviction occurred. It is also possible to check your credit report,
No animal has ever been on Mars.
has there ever been a huricane named patricia
No one has ever been anywhere near Neptune. The furthest humans have ever been from Earth is the orbit of the Moon.
No practical uses have not been found, because only seven atoms have ever been made, which is not a large enough sample to distinguish any features or find any uses.
No.
If YOU, his legal spouse, signed the lease - then he cannot be evicted. If no one ever signed a valid lease, then you can all be evicted.
"How long do you have till an eviction is off of your credit?" i am looking for an apartment but i have an eviction that's about 9 years old. the question on the aplication is have i ever been evicted? do i say yes or no? how do i find out if its still there?
Generally, you could stay until you get evicted, unless you already have been. Once you have been evicted from a house that you do not own, you are legally trespassing after that time and could be arrested.
Yes, it is possible to get evicted if you signed a lease that does not allow cats. You will be given the option to rehome your cat, find a new apartment, or get evicted. If you signed a lease that says it allows cats (and you've paid the deposit / pet rent if applicable), then you can't be evicted.
Dude, its too late. Seriously.
Don't get evicted and you won't have to worry.
Georgina Hayes is desperate. Ever since her father left and they were evicted from their apartment, her family has been living in their car. With her mama juggling two jobs and trying to make enough money to find a place to live, Georgina is stuck looking after her younger brother, Toby.
Fine out where the potential tenant had been living for the past five years, then look online or call the clerk's office or prothonotary of the county in which the tenant lived.
Let's say you can try. There is nothing wrong with that. Whether or not you will be able to rent is totally up to the new landlord. The new tenant questionnaire may ask something like "have you ever been evicted ... ". If you have and answer it 'no', you face perjury charges later on. Be honest right up front with the new landlord ... maybe with a good explanation, they might rent to you.
Different in every state.
Where ever you have been treated.
You are being evicted.