I am renting a house to someone. They were supposed to be out of the house by March 1. It is now March 10 and they still have stuff to move off the back porch. They keep telling me they are going to get the stuff off the porch but they dont. Can I throw the stuff away? Also, can I charge them rent because I can't show the place so I am losing money daily. What can I do legally?
Thanks,
Lauren
2007-03-10
04:33:04
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7 answers
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asked by
Sam468
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in
Politics & Government
➔ Law & Ethics
Also, If this makes a difference I live in Florida.
2007-03-10
04:33:24 ·
update #1
The law requires that such property be stored for a minimum of one month in a facility to be chosen by you as the landlord. You should see that the items are placed in a storage facility and inform the previous tenants that they must pay at their own convenience to retrieve these items. Within one months time if said items have not been collected you are permitted under the law to sell or dispose of the items. It is also important to understand that you might be required by your state to return the items to the tenant (or tenants representative) provided that they provide you with a WRITTEN request that enumerates the items and their descriptions left behind and the address they are to be delivered to (this generally must be given to you within 18 days following the tenants vacancy of the property). You may be entitled to rent, however a judge may not grant it on the basis that you could've placed them in a storage unit and thus deprived yourself of the rental income...most definitely worth a try though. Hope this was helpful for you.
2007-03-10 04:55:29
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answer #1
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answered by G 2
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Try the site below, Lauren. Make sure to change the location/state in which you rent your house. If you need an Attorney, try the last site and watch the movie. Its so important to protect your investments. Hope this helps.
2007-03-10 04:52:23
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answer #2
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answered by citronge69 4
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States differ on the legalities of disposing of tenants' property. In your situation, I would place the items in storage (it can be off the premises). When (or if) they decide to reclaim the property, you can legally charge them a storage fee.
This way the items are not obstructing your ability to re-let your property...and you haven't exposed yourself to a possible claim by the former tenant.
2007-03-10 04:54:24
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answer #3
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answered by Wyoming Rider 6
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If the "stuff" is on the porch and not inside the house, you can get rid of it. Chances are they will never return and you could be stuck for months. You can charge them rent and in the amount you choose for storage but you probably won't collect from them............Get rid of their junk and next time secure better tenants.......................Good Luck. It is rough and nearly impossible to get and maintain good people...........
2007-03-10 04:38:37
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Did some googling on the sphere: The honest Housing Act demands materials vendors of housing amenities to make low priced exceptions of their rules and operations to arise with the money for women and adult males with disabilities equivalent housing possibilities. case in point, a landlord with a "no pets" coverage can be required to furnish an exception to this rule and enable a individual who's unaware of shop a instruction manual canines interior the residing. Legally in spite of the certainty that your landlord had a "No Pets" coverage, he/she could maximum frequently be breaking federal regulation by skill of way of no longer allowing you to have a provider animal. additionally on puppy expenses: in spite of whether the valuables facilitates pets, the disabled tenant who makes use of a provider animal isn't required to make a puppy deposit or pay a puppy-appropriate cleansing fee. even with the certainty that, the owner could fee a secure practices Deposit for the condominium a similar volume it is charged for all tenants. even with the certainty which you do could be waiting to teach documentation which you pick the provider animal, whether or no longer it particularly is documentation out of your well-being care expert or diverse aspects.
2016-11-23 19:18:03
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answer #5
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answered by lunger 4
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It will make a difference where the lease is located because different states have different statutes concerning residential tennants. Call a lawyer near you who is familiar with that area. He probably won't charge to talk on the phone for such a simple question.
2007-03-10 04:43:15
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answer #6
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answered by webned 6
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you can charge a storage fee for every day they are late, however you must wait a certain length of time before you can discard or keep any items they left at the residence. (usually 30 days)
again, you must give them a minimum time frame after they move out before you can destroy thier property, but you can charge them storage fee for the time you had to keep the stuff.
2007-03-10 04:47:15
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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