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my landlord is going to court to get an eviction notice. I did break the lease but how many days does the court give you to move?

2006-07-31 11:40:15 · 6 answers · asked by 123456 1 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

6 answers

i think 30 days

2006-07-31 11:42:55 · answer #1 · answered by cwb63ss 6 · 1 0

When the eviction is filed you usually have a 7-10 period beofre you go to court. You then have 5 days in Texas before a writ is filed if you are still living there. Once filed, the constable can show up and stand there while he watches you move out. Sometimes a day or two, sometimes a week.

2006-07-31 11:45:39 · answer #2 · answered by educated guess 5 · 0 0

Depends on the state. In Cali heres how it goes.

An eviction notice is filed.
A judge will usually decide the case within 20 days.
If the landlord wins, you get five days to leave on your own otherwise a sherrif shows up and you are removed from the premises.
Your stuff is stored and you have 18 days to pick it up. If you don't the landlord can sell it auction to recover fees.
All of this will be at your expense if you refuse to leave on your own accord.

Its not good. I would just leave and save yourself the hassle.

2006-07-31 11:50:05 · answer #3 · answered by rweasel6 2 · 0 0

30 days

2006-07-31 11:43:28 · answer #4 · answered by WhiteHat 6 · 0 0

depends on the state and your lease. Since you was not paying month to month they can give you as little as 2 weeks and as much as 30 days.

2006-07-31 11:43:40 · answer #5 · answered by Autumn 5 · 0 0

particular. you're to blame to look after your self and state which you have vacated the premises (fairly in TX which looks to have much less protections for tenants than different states). in case you do no longer instruct-up, the owner would get carry of a default judgement against you. desirable case state of affairs, the owner would not instruct-up and the case is thrown-out. solid success! do no longer enable the court and landlord intimidate you. Even you defaulted, you nevertheless have the desirable suited to look after your self and undertaking the claims made against you.

2016-12-14 17:08:01 · answer #6 · answered by varcoe 4 · 0 0

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