You can use the following website to find an income based apartment in Marietta, GA: http://www.mynewplace.com Just place your information in the search boxes and plenty of places near you will pop up!
An eviction is an eviction, even if it was family that evicted you. Your mom had to go through a legal process to have you removed from the premises and so it is stated as suck on a permanent legal record. So how do I get it off?
"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?
The couple was evicted from their apartment because they were always very late with the rent.
Yes. If the eviction is for no reason (no-fault), some states might make the landlord wait as much as 12 months to actually get the apartment back. But, if there is a reason for the eviction (like non-payment of rent, or disturbances), an eviction can proceed quickly.
When you get kicked out of your apartment, it is referred to as being evicted.
Yes, an eviction will follow you any where in the united states!
Yes
Don't get evicted and you won't have to worry.
You do not have to pay for your own eviction, and if you are given such a charge, I would advise you not to pay it. However, if you were evicted because you have damaged hotel property, that is another matter. You are liable for damage that you cause.
An eviction will stay on your record regardless of the future status of the entity that legally evicted you. Only time will heal that -- normally seven years. However, most apartment complexes will take a look at your record of only about three years and make their decision. However each complex is different and has their own rules, and unfortunately there is nothing you can do about it.
Basically, yes.If you have been served an eviction notice, you should contact a lawyer immediately.It's at least reasonably common for locations to have laws that specify under what circumstances a tenant can, and cannot, be evicted. A local lawyer specializing in tenant rights will be familiar with these, and may be able to prevent or at least delay the eviction process. What you should not do is rely on "somebody on the internet said I couldn't be evicted in the winter," because that's liable to find you shivering on the street in a week or so.
A tenant is "evicted" when the court issues a judgment for possession to the landlord. That judgment gives the tenant a date by which the move has to be made. If the tenant holds over in possession of the apartment despite the judgment of possession, the landlord gets a "warrant for removal", which is sent to a court constable. If the tenant has not vacated the premises, the warrant for removal permits the court officer to physically remove the tenant's belongings out of the apartment and leave them at the curb. It is extremely rare that such a thing ever happens though, because in virtually every eviction matter, the tenant moves out before the physical eviction has to take place.