My landlord mailed us a 3 day notice thru regular mail. He did not post it at our house or hand it to us. I was under the impression that "post and mail" meant both had to be done. Is it legal to only mail a 3 day notice in the mail...it was not certified mail.
2007-07-11
13:46:06
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8 answers
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asked by
Donna R
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in
Business & Finance
➔ Renting & Real Estate
I live in southern california, sorry forgot to put that in the first part.
2007-07-11
14:04:28 ·
update #1
I understand that he can give me a three day notice but doesn't he have to go about the process in a particular way...to assure the court that I recieved it? and he also included the late fees in the amount owed...doesn't that make the 3 day worthless?
2007-07-11
16:08:58 ·
update #2
I believe you need to have at least a 30 day notice. Check your lease agreement and your state laws though.
2007-07-11 13:52:10
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, as long as you received it. It can be put on the door, handed to you, stuck to your shoe... Also, check with a local agency such as the Fair Housing Advocates Assoc. That is the what they call the local agency here in my town that handles issues between landlords and tenants. The problem with your question is twofold. First, there as soooo many regulations for so many places that it is almost impossible to tell you what the answer is; and Second, it is not clear if the notice is for not receiving the payment (which a landlord must give first), OR for a 30 day notice to vacate, which comes AFTER the first notice is given (again, at least in my locale). Then we must wait a full 30 days before we can start eviction proceedings here, so the tenants get two full months free before we can get them out. Not part of your question, and I'm sure you paid, but I hope this helps... :-)
2007-07-11 14:14:42
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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What do you advise it is previous your administration? you ought to continuously have further earnings the economic business enterprise in case of an emergency. definite, what he's doing is criminal. He has pronounced you while the money is expected to be gained and if no longer, he will take you to court docket. If it gets that a techniques, then, the choose can grant an eviction word. No, this is no longer loopy. it is one way that he earns money. So, in case you at the instant are not paying the whole quantity as agreed in the settlement, then you definately are breaking the settlement AND inflicting him to go through!
2016-10-01 10:10:21
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answer #3
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answered by neubert 4
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At this point, the court is not involved. If it has to go to court later, he mailed it, you got it. That will be good enough for the court.
2007-07-12 02:44:32
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answer #4
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answered by NeighborLady 4
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So sorry Donna, it is legal, but check with your local fair housing commission to be sure the rules apply this way in your area.
2007-07-12 03:41:26
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answer #5
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answered by debbi b 3
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Yes, it is legal. The only reason he might mail it certified is that he has proof of receipt. However, the fact that you received it makes it legal.
2007-07-11 14:04:32
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answer #6
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answered by acermill 7
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3 days is all they have to give as long as they had reason for it. otherwise it would be breach of contract.
2007-07-11 15:28:48
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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you have to check your state laws, where do you live at?
2007-07-11 13:48:35
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answer #8
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answered by Gengis 6
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