My method was to write, "Return to sender: not at this address" on the mail, and put it back in the mailbox for the mail carrier to pick up and take.
Added: Or go to the local Post Office from which your mail carrier operates and speak to the Counter Clerk or Postmaster.
My method was to write, "Return to sender: not at this address" on the mail, and put it back in the mailbox for the mail carrier to pick up and take.Added: Or go to the local Post Office from which your mail carrier operates and speak to the Counter Clerk or Postmaster.
No, it should not.
Legally, probably not. Why would a tenant want to do that though?
That depends on if damage was present when the tenant moved in, the length the tenant resided there, the type and level of damage caused. If the tenant lived there 15 years and the carpet had been there 10 years before the tenant moved in, that would be reasonable wear and tear as the carpet is 25 years old.
34 years old
The tenant should stop paying rent whenever the governmental agency to whom the taxes are owed threatens to foreclose or repossess the property. In that case, the tenant should demand (in writing) that the landlord pay the delinquent taxes. If the landlord refuses, the tenant should move (again, upon giving written notice to the landlord).
You can't, unless the tenant is in the process of destroying the rental unit and you need to stop it. Calling the police would get faster action in that case.
38 i love davvid tennant
David Tennant was born in 1971 and he is 38 years old (as of 2009).
alert off
There's really not much a landlord can do about this. You need to handle this case as if it were anyone harassing you. Either get a restraining order or call the cops.
Did a court adjudicate the tenant as incompetent? Then, if and when the landlord sues, that would provide the basis for a defense. You can't stop the landlord from trying to recover damages.