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My best friend of 10 years asked me to move in with her and her boyfriend. It was mutually beneficial for everyone to save money. we got a house & i said that i didnt want my name on the lease so it was just her and him, lwe lived togther for the last week of Nov. through 2/11/07. I gave her 500.00 for the one week i was with her in nov and i told her that my rent prorated was only $125.00 so the remaining $375.00 was to go to the deposit on the new house. Well we were having some issues with the new landlord but i was only hearing my friends side of the story since i wasnt on the lease the landlord would mostly talk to my friend and her b/f, i got a call on 2/7/07 saying we were going to be evicted becase the rent handnt been paid and i talked to my roommates and they told me they paid it....well they didnt and i came home on 2/10/07 and all of their stuff was gone and a note said i 24 hrs to be out and that she would give me my rent money back,-she hasnt so far, should i sue her?

2007-02-26 08:22:04 · 6 answers · asked by successisnteasy 3 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

6 answers

Absolutely. Your friend apparantly isnt much of a friend. She may as well have stolen it from your purse in the middle of the night. Frankly, what a scumbag.

2007-02-26 08:55:57 · answer #1 · answered by Mark P. 5 · 1 0

Well, it depends. Do you want to salvage this relationship? Is this a person you can find yourself trusting again? If not, also take into account that you will never get the full amount back, as you will have to pay some legal fees to process this. Also, be sure to keep copies of everything, because if you do decide to sue, and have no documentation to support you giving them the money, a written agreement for sharing the rent of the apartment and a copy of the eviction notice, you will have no leg to stand on. Then you will be out all of the legal fees, a friendship, and any moral ground you wish to stand on.

2007-02-26 08:32:55 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Do you have something in writing. if not it would be a waste of time. You were not on the lease, living there, so it is your word against hers. She can always say that she felt sorry for you and let you stay with her.

If the note specifically says she will pay you back and can be verified (her handwriting/ signature) you have a chance.

My advise: consider it tuition for a lesson learned and move on.

2007-02-26 08:32:10 · answer #3 · answered by wineasy03 6 · 0 0

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2016-09-29 22:56:35 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

No. Sorry this didnt work out. Its not worth it to sue her over it. Keep asking for the money but dont expect to ever see it again.

2007-02-26 08:30:55 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

By all means take her to small claims court and get your money back.

2007-02-26 08:25:33 · answer #6 · answered by RodneyRowland 5 · 0 0

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