If you were my tenant, you would have been out of that apt 5 months ago. I give you a 7 day notice to pay rent or move exactly 1 day after the rent is late. After that 7 days, I file for eviction in court. Around here (MI) I can legally have you out by the end of the month. And you would owe me late fees, past due rent, court fees and any unpaid utilities. If after 1 week you havent paid that, then I go back to court, amend the court ordered payment to include these other court costs and then garnish your wages
2007-09-19 10:43:20
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answer #1
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answered by kimmamarie 5
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Sorry to burst your bubble
Checkers & Andrew Wiggin
but a competent landlord that follows the rules and procedures can get you out MUCH faster than 6 months. With a little luck on how the calender falls, I can post 5 day demand, have a court date and have the sheriff escorting your non-paying butt (and all your stuff) into the street before the end of the month ie rent due on 1st, late on the 6th, eviction order and actual eviction by the 31st of the same month. Almost always within 30-45 days, only once has it taken 60 days.
2007-09-19 17:03:51
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answer #2
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answered by Craig T 6
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Only in America can you not pay rent for 6 months and you get a eviction notice and you still want to wait until the landloard has to get a court order to get you out. You have cost the landloard thousand of dollars. Good luck on finding new place to live, because you just screwed your self. And to all renters that think landloards are ***-holes, people like this is why.
2007-09-19 15:34:28
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answer #3
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answered by Leo F 4
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How can you afford the internet and be 6 months behind in rent? Laws vary by state - read your eviction notice.
2007-09-19 15:20:32
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answer #4
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answered by l8tr g8tr 7
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The date stamped on the notice is the date you have to be out...usually by 5:00 pm.
If you are not out, they will change the locks and then you'll have to pay storage fees to get back your things.
2007-09-19 16:41:01
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answer #5
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answered by Expert8675309 7
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Depends on the state you live in. Some are 24 hours, some 72 hours, some a week.
It SHOULD be on the notice.
2007-09-19 15:20:02
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answer #6
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answered by wizjp 7
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It depends on where you live, and how much risk you're willing to take to avoid being arrested for presumed contract violation, fraud, vagrancy, loitering, rank stupidity, etc, etc, etc. (good luck trying to get a line of credit, mortgage, or even a security clearance with "bad debtor" on your credit history!).
BTW, your landlord must be a very patient individual!
On the other hand, parents are supposed to be patient! ;)
2007-09-19 15:37:25
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answer #7
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answered by skaizun 6
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⥠Usually 30 days! Good Luck!
2007-09-19 15:19:53
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answer #8
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answered by NCIS ♥ Addict 6
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I think 30 days
2007-09-19 16:31:57
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answer #9
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answered by Jessica 5
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No matter what state your in, nobody can just kick you out... Once you receive the notice to vacate - wait for the court papers - only a judge and a court order can force an eviction on you.
Going the court route will grant you up to six additional months to find a place.
2007-09-19 15:24:06
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answer #10
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answered by The truth 3
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