This will sound bad but it has to be done. My mother has been staying with my children and I since December. She does not contribute (i am single mom) Long story short, besides calling my kids bastards and assholes ETC and me names and on top of that STEALING from me numerous times .. I can no longer take it. I tried to kick her out but since she has been there more than 30 days, she has acquired residency. I need her out of our lives. How do i go about evicting her because she will never leave on her own. I need this done asap.
2007-05-21
03:33:58
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11 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
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Business & Finance
➔ Renting & Real Estate
Myself and my children's names are on the lease. Hers is not. When i kicked her out in december, the police told me she had every right to be there because of her established residency.
My landlord does NOT even want her there, but the cops told him the same thing. I need to find a cheap/free way to do this. And does it have to be 30 days? Alot can happen in 30 more days.... ALOT of negative things... UGH
2007-05-21
03:46:50 ·
update #1
1. move w/o her
2. move her to small apt, change locks on your place
3. call attorney and have papers served to remove her
2007-05-21 03:37:21
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Do you live in the United States? If so, I know the answer. If not, then you may as well ignore me. Who knows if it is the same somewhere else. Anyhoo...
Who IS on the lease? If it is you, then you can kick out anyone you like. How long she lived there doesn't matter. All that matters is who is on the lease. If you are the one on the lease, then write her a letter and give her 30 days to vacate. If she doesn't, call the cops. Tell her that in the letter. It should be as simple as that. If she is not on the lease, then she has no right to stay there. You could consider asking your landlord for help, too.
If she IS on the lease or DOES have a right to be there for some reason I don't understand, then move yourself. If nothing else works, call an attorney and get legal help. There is no way in heck that there isn't a way to get rid of someone you don't want living with you.
2007-05-21 03:39:42
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answer #2
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answered by Mr. Taco 7
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in case you're evicted, you will owe any lease in keeping with the employ, courtroom expenditures, legal expert expenditures and damages. An eviction is a public courtroom checklist. you've got an impossible time finding an excellent apartment for some years with an eviction on your checklist. If the owner is presented a money judgment, it is going to pass on your credit checklist the two by using utilising courtroom reporting (recorded judgment) or the owner can placed it on your credit checklist (all 3 bureaus) for under $15.00 At this factor your landlord could probably be receptive to a employ buyout just to be rid of you. Negotiate a employ buyout with the owner. start up by using offering the quantity equivalent to 2 months lease. the owner could require yet another month. in case you come back to an contract, get it in writing. this way your liabilities end with the lump sum fee. Your apartment and credit histories is quite no longer affected. in case you do no longer come to an contract and pass out, the owner can carry you answerable for the lease until the two the employ expires or a alternative tenant is got here across. the owner can carry you answerable for any expenditures he incurs using your breach, jointly with merchandising expenditures, agent expenditures, etc. in case you do no longer pay the quantities above, the owner can sue you. The judgment will incorporate no longer purely the charges reported, yet courtroom expenditures and gathered pastime until the judgment is paid. Your apartment and credit histories would be ruined. The judgment could properly be renewed for as much as 20 years and the owner can garnish wages or economic company bills, place liens on (destiny) very own sources, etc. destiny landlords will deny renting to you because of the unpaid judgment. Many employers examine credit, so which you may properly be scrutinized for having the open judgment against you. coverage companies and different lenders pull credit and adjust your expenditures dependant on your credit, so which you would be paying bigger expenditures for some years.
2017-01-10 12:15:47
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Yes you definetly need her to go and get away from you and your children, call the owner and explain what is going on, they have the legal right to evict her not just on the grounds that she is not on the lease but because she has displayed harmful behavior in a threatening manner,unless you just don't want to call the police, go to your local prosecuting attorney and file charges of theft against her and explain what has happened. If you can not get this done there consult an attorney and find out what exactly are your rights....get her out
2007-05-21 03:39:15
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answer #4
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answered by jonni_hayes 6
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The answer depends on where you are. Every state I know of has eviction laws; some may apply even if Mom's name isn't on the lease (Florida law is that way). Check to see what laws apply in your area first, before you end up faced with prosecution for illegal eviction. And speaking of prosecution, if she steals from you again call the police and press charges.
Best of luck to you.
2007-05-23 23:54:40
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answer #5
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answered by AlphaSierra 1
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You poor thing! If you want to do it legally, you can go to small claims court and start an eviction proceeding. The courts should be able to advise you on the legal proper steps to take.
Or you can simply pack her bags, change the locks and send her on her way, I don't think that would be the best route to take being that it will probably cause some drama.
Either way you are entitled to make her leave if she is disrespecting your home and children.
2007-05-21 03:41:17
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answer #6
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answered by Angel Eyes 3
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Give her 30 days written notice and have it noterized.If she's not gone in 30 days have the sherriff or constable come and remove her.Good luck.
2007-05-21 03:37:37
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answer #7
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answered by ? 6
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Tell the landlord, but then if you do that may get you kicked out yourself. Just talk to the landloard and explain it to her/him what's going on, on they can evict her.
2007-05-21 03:42:42
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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If her name is not on the lease you can legally kick her out!
2007-05-24 20:04:31
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answer #9
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answered by luciousgreeneyedlady 5
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Oh Blimey riley- see a solicitor pet- go ring the CAB- you need some strong legal advice.
2007-05-21 03:37:36
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answer #10
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answered by the Phoenix 2
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