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OR do landlords typically have some sort of reciept for this?

OR should I make another copy for myself and have her sign it?

ahhhh i dont know what to do because she is going to give me a hard time and I dont want to give her any way that she can later say--- "I never recieved a 30 day notice from you"..

2007-12-10 07:59:17 · 17 answers · asked by trojangirl8 2 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

AWWWW most of you are saying send it certified mail, which is great, but i forgot to say that she lives there, so it wouldnt make sense.... maybe the post-office date stamp would be good... any more ideas?

2007-12-10 09:37:21 · update #1

17 answers

Just send it via certified mail, with a return receipt. She'll have to sign for it.

2007-12-10 08:03:10 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Either mail it with receipt notification from the US post office (assuming you're in the USA) or have her sign two copies, one for her and one for you.

After that, there's not much she can do except try to screw you out of any security deposit you have put down. If you have a video camera, video tape the whole place after you've moved your stuff out. Flush toilets, look inside the refrigerator, run the shower etc. Make sure you have enough light to clearly see the walls and whether or not there are any marks etc. Keep the video until you get your deposit (or an acceptable amount of your deposit) back.

2007-12-10 08:04:56 · answer #2 · answered by J P 4 · 1 0

Give her a copy and make her sign your copy as she accepted it. If she won't sign it in front of you, mail her another copy via UPS or certified mail so that way you know she received it and now it is valid as a contract saying that you are leaving and it will hold it court cause that is called the Mailbox Law.

2007-12-10 08:04:04 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Acer suggested Mississippi and pointed you to the statutes. in the journey that your state rules require a 30 day/ complete calendar month word, then your word is useful January one million and you're responsible for lease by way of January 31. Your landlord has no legal accountability to prorate the lease. you will have given the interest on December 2nd, twelfth or thirty first, because of the fact the interest would not bypass into consequence till the thirty first.

2016-11-14 08:17:10 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Send it by mail, keep a copy and have it hand posted at the post office, return receipt requested. It will cost a little more, but it will be safer.

2007-12-10 08:03:46 · answer #5 · answered by Barbara M 5 · 1 0

DEFINITELY send it certified mail! Also take pictures of your place when you move out so she doesn't try to charge you for damage you didn't cause! That's a sure thing from shady landlords.

2007-12-10 08:47:47 · answer #6 · answered by Lisa S 2 · 0 0

You should make the notification in writing and mail it via certified mail so you have proof it was received. Forget the "witness" scheme.

2007-12-10 08:24:56 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Simply MAIL it to her certified mail, return receipt requested. If she refuses to sign for it, you STILL have proof that you sent it. Just keep the unopened envelope in your possession as evidence.

2007-12-10 08:16:54 · answer #8 · answered by acermill 7 · 1 0

Can you do it in writing and send it to her via the U.S. mail? You could do "receipt required" and she would have to sign a card when she receives the notice.

Good luck! :)

2007-12-10 08:02:49 · answer #9 · answered by searching_please 6 · 4 0

Both sign a copy and have a 3rd party sign it to and date it!

2007-12-10 08:25:09 · answer #10 · answered by James 3 · 0 0

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