It depends on whether you have received a section 21 notice or a section 8 notice. Both notices advise you of when you need to vacate the premises by. Once that date has passed the landlord may apply to the courts for an eviction notice - these normally give you 14 days but the date will be stated on the documentation.
The laws vary in different jurisdictions. You need to check the rules in your jurisdiction. You could try contacting a landlord-tenant agency in your area or an attorney who specializes in landlord-tenant law.
That depends on the laws of the state. Yo might want to repost your question, saying what state the apartment is in.
You become homeless.
An eviction definitely! With a broken lease, you are still paying your landlord the rent that you own him and will probably be paying a fee to break the lease. With an evicition, the renter probably has stopped paying the rent or has damaged the property or has been doing something illegal like growing marijuana on the property.
As long as you are paying your rent on time & have not caused other problems (destruction of property, etc.), you cannot be evicted. If, however, your rental unit is somehow attached to your job (hired man on a farm, etc.), then your employer must still give you 60 days' written notice of eviction.
Paying is both the present participle of the verb 'to pay', as well as a gerund (a verb being treated as a noun).As a verb: I am paying for the movie tickets with a credit card.As a gerund: This restaurant's policy is paying before eating.
Most of the time it won't unless the managers or owner ran a credit check before you moved in, if so it would be listed as "public record" on your credit report because they had to file an eviction notice at the courthouse in order to get you out.AnswerThe actual eviction does not show up in the body of a credit bureau credit report. If a judgment for nonpayment is granted for unpaid rent or other cause, that judgment appears on the credit report under public records. The actual eviction will not. However, most landlords now use third party agencies to obtain the credit bureau credit information and combine it with court records(public information about filings, not just judgments.) Those 3rd party reports often include followup with former landlords. Thus the disclosure of evictions. Good luck!
First, just because you receive an eviction notice doesn't mean that you have to leave... especially if you had a lease. The landlord sending you an eviction notice, or what's called a notice to quit is just the landlord telling you that they want you to leave and this is only the first of many steps. If you already left, then you left well before you should have. The notice gives you a certain amount of time to leave, if you had stayed the landlord would then need to get a court date which would take about another 2-4 weeks after the time is up in the first notice you got. Then you would have went to court and you could have argued your defense as to why you feel you should stay in the apartment, if it was because you stopped paying the rent for whatever reason, you could have been given a chance by the court to make payments to catch up on the back rent. You should have stayed and went to court is what you should have done, by leaving the apartment without going to court you gave up all of your rights and at this point the landlord can now go to small claims court and tell them that you broke the lease even though it was your landlord who was trying to break the lease first by asking you to leave. I would refuse to pay any amount to the landlord, and wait to see if you get a notice to go to the court. I would also save the notice you got asking you to leave and anything else you have from the landlord in writing, including your lease. If they file in court you will need this to show that you were not the one that broke your lease, in fact they were the ones to ask you to leave, and you did, and now they are trying to sue you even though they were the ones that broke the lease. So, DO NOT PAY THEM A PENNY at this point and wait to see if they file a case in court... if they do, you already have your defense by saying exactly what I just told you, and you can support this defense with the evidence such as your lease, the eviction notice they gave you, and anything else in writing that you have from your landlord. I am in the process of building a new website to help landlords and tenants with landlord / tenant rights, state by state housing laws, tips, advice, tools, services, etc.. I'm still working on the site right now, but it should be up online soon and I will continue building it up until early 2011. The name of it is Landlord and Tenant Laws which can be found online soon at...... You can always feel free to email me with any questions you have about landlord and tenant laws through the website
In order to remove someone from your apartment, you will need to obtain an eviction notice. Without an eviction notice, it is illegal to remove the person from the premises.
It is best to receive a completed statemnet before paying an invoice.
It is best to receive a completed statemnet before paying an invoice.
It is best to receive a completed statemnet before paying an invoice.
Wait, I misunderstood your question, do you want an eviction on your record? It will be harder to get another apartment in the future and it stays on your permanent record. So, If you are not paying rent and you have no lease and you think the eviction will give you some spare time you are right but it will screw up your future. You should talk to your landlord and do it amicably.
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.
You will need to contact your local housing court to find out the proper procedure for serving, filing, and executing a unlawful retainer (eviction). Some jurisdictions require 3 days notice initially, while others require 5-10 days.
If that person is defined as a tenant per your jurisdictions definitions, which commonly define it as a person(s) who reside longer than x amount of days at residential dwelling is deemed to have declared tenancy, or those who receive mail at the address.Therefore, if that roommate is defined as a tenant per your state laws, then changing the locks would constitute an illegal eviction and you can be sued. Non-payment is sufficient reason to give a notice to quit (an eviction notice) and begin the eviction proceedings, it's not okay to take the law into your own hands.It can be quite costly.
I would start with a visit to your friendly local barrister and ask what the legal proceedings are for eviction, particularly if they are not spelled out exactly in the contract signed by the landlord and the tenant. In general, you have to give sufficient notice of eviction that the individuals can find alternate housing or get current on their account.
Because she is a resident, depending on the city, and state your in, You must do it by way of legal eviction, Or at least that is the way it is in California. You must present her with a 30 day notice to vacate the premises. She can then file a lawful detainer on the eviction which will prolong the process. But usually once you give her the notice she should get the idea.... Let me know how it goes. Because she is a resident, depending on the city, and state your in, You must do it by way of legal eviction, Or at least that is the way it is in California. You must present her with a 30 day notice to vacate the premises. She can then file a lawful detainer on the eviction which will prolong the process. But usually once you give her the notice she should get the idea.... Let me know how it goes.
Not paying rent is grounds for eviction. Most courts won't care about the bankruptcy, and most bankruptcy judges will not stop an eviction.
You need both the product or service and the invoice.