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Hi, we evicted our tenant after her one year lease was up (and she refused to sign the new lease), giving her 60 days notice. We said that she was to move out (i.e. evicted) because we wanted to take the property back for personal use. She moved out the end of August and now I have someone who would like to rent our place. Is there a time limit for when you use the property for personal use before you can rent again? I don't want to get sued for wrongful eviction or whatnot. thanks! p.s. I'm in ontario canada

2006-09-11 12:23:15 · 8 answers · asked by mepa 1 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

8 answers

If the old tenant refused to sign the new lease then you can re-rent anytime you want...

2006-09-11 12:26:10 · answer #1 · answered by secret agent lady 4 · 0 0

I don't know about Canada, but in NJ if you evict based upon personal use, you had better be in there and be able to prove it for at least 6 months. You can't leave it vacant or re-rent it within that time.

If you do, your tenant is entitled to 6 months worth of rent plus relocation costs and as it is a violation of the consumer fraud act, the tenant may sue for TRIPLE damages.

If I were you, I would be checking with a local landlord/tenant lawyer so as not to have a huge legal and financial headache on the horizon.

2006-09-12 03:18:00 · answer #2 · answered by BoomChikkaBoom 6 · 0 0

however in case you have a lease or no longer, you grants him 3 days word to pass away because of the violation. The lady chum's dogs isn't your situation and additionally you dont choose for greater suitable than a million dogs. If he doesnt pass away you need to get a courtroom order. What do you propose multi-unit renting rules? All condo homes are multiple instruments. You dont ought to describe something different than your situation of the tenancy replaced into one dogs purely. indexed right here are a pair of web sites approximately L.A. condo regulation.

2016-12-15 06:23:02 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The eviction was either legal or illegal from day one. What you do afterwords has no effect. If the lease was up and you gave 60 days notice, I think it was legal.

2006-09-11 12:35:53 · answer #4 · answered by STEVEN F 7 · 0 0

Well, in the states it's the next day! Because she gave up possestion of her lease by vacating.So if you are able to rent, rent.

2006-09-11 12:28:48 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, I'm assuming she didn't pay rent for September, in which case you can put the new tenant in.

If she paid for september, you have to wait.

2006-09-11 12:32:48 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You need to check your local laws to find out.

2006-09-11 12:27:06 · answer #7 · answered by Cactus Dan 3 · 0 0

There would be none in the US.

2006-09-11 15:51:24 · answer #8 · answered by Matt J 3 · 0 0

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