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Evicted tenant in Mississippi. Received no rent and found out more than a month later in jail for selling crystal meth with intent to distribute. Tenant released now wanting his stuff we put in storage,will not pay money he owes, so want give his stuff back is that legal? My inturpatation of law says legal

2006-09-13 07:41:28 · 9 answers · asked by kesmith4 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

9 answers

I believe so, but you really need to spell better I hardly understood that. You should probably speak to a landlord/tenant attorney since it seems that these are special circumstances.

How is it that people are allowed to e-mail you but you aren't allowed to respond?

You need to learn how to spell I didn't say anything about your grammar. Your question was bordering on unintelligible the way that you spelled some of those words.

2006-09-13 07:51:56 · answer #1 · answered by evillyn 6 · 0 0

Interesting little "grey area" you've got for youself there. From my own interpretation of things, it all depends on whether or not the tenant in question was in jail at the time of the eviction.

I'm assuming that you handled the eviction legally, meaning that you obtained an eviction order from the courts, attempted to have it served, and then returned to court to have the order enforced. If so, and if the tenant was not incarcerated, then his departure would be construed as abandoning the premises - and that anything left inside was abandoned as well.

Many states have statutes which require "abandoned" items to be held in storage for a certain duration, during which the tenant can return and - after paying back rent and storage fees - can obtain his items. However, failure to do so will also result in the forfieture of said items on the tenant's behalf.

I'd say get in touch with a local reputable attorney for a consultation. There may be a nominal charge involved, but it will be far less than hiring that person to represent you - and you'll find out exactly what the law says are your rights and responsibilities in this matter.

2006-09-13 07:51:16 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

In most states a landlord can keep a tenant's property until back rent is paid.

I would be careful of a legal time limit before it can be sold.
The tenant will have to pay the storage also.

My opinion from some states.

2006-09-13 07:53:19 · answer #3 · answered by ed 7 · 1 0

each state is different.... for now you're holding his stuff until he pays.... perfectly legal.. tell him to get a lawyer. BUT.. let me ask you... do you really want a convicted druggie to have a reason to harass/bother you all the time.. is it worth it? I'd give him his stuff back and not have to deal with him again

2006-09-13 08:13:45 · answer #4 · answered by rachael 3 · 1 0

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2016-10-14 23:22:24 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

you are only allowed to keep a damage deposit if rent is due. if you paid to have his property stored he also has to pay the storage fee...it's the same in every state and what do you want his crap for anyway? who learned you english?

2006-09-13 10:24:53 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Check with lawyer but I think you cannot keep personal possessions. You must return them.

2006-09-13 09:12:04 · answer #7 · answered by FrogDog 4 · 0 0

i think its legal, but i'm british and you sound american. we have a citizens advice bureau here which gives advice on everything, have you got an american version???? you could go to see them.

2006-09-13 07:49:26 · answer #8 · answered by jemma b 2 · 1 0

sorry, no

2006-09-13 07:42:20 · answer #9 · answered by footballgrl 3 · 0 1

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