You'll have to get an attorney to draft the proper format for this.
In most states, a tenant can fight a 3 day eviction notice. The tenant will need to go to court and speak with the judge.
if a eviction notice was servered after i gave a 30 day notice as im a cosigner to be removed from agreement am i still responsible
Absolutely! A 30 day notice has to be given in such cases before the landlord can file eviction proceedings.
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.
Is your name on the lease? If so it probably is illegal. But if it isn't then you probably have no legal recourse in this case.
This would probably be a weekly tenancy due to the short notice. Most notices require 30 to 60 days notice to terminate a tenancy, depending on the jurisdiction. A legal eviction requires the landlord to document failure to pay rent, or an ongoing lateness in payment of rent by the tenant. He would then apply to the court for a motion to pay rent or quit. Once the documents are signed, they must be delivered to the tenant, or posted on the door of the tenant's domicile. If this provokes no response; the landlord may then file for a notice of eviction.
The home owner of course. Tenants have tenant´s rights such as 30 day notice before eviction etc., but the home owner owns it.
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.
Actually, a 60 day notice and three-day notice are two different types of notices. The three day notice is served upon tenants who do not pay their rent, and is done as part of an eviction process.
A 3 or 5-day notice is called a statuatory notice, which gives the tenant that much time to either pay the rent or move out. If the tenant does neither the landlord can proceed with filing for eviction.
It means you have 10 days to pay your rent or to move out, or eviction proceedings will begin against you.
I am no lawyer but... The notice of eviction should make this very clear. Read it carefully and do a search of Tennessee law to confirm it is legal.