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Eviction Process advice by LL yikes (IL) on November 3, 2009 @12:40
I will be filing papers hopefully today (if I hear back from my lawyer)to get my deadbeat tenants out of my house. This will be my first eviction process so I was hoping any of you that have been through this can offer me any advice? Things I should be prepared for? Loopholes the tenants might or commonly use? I want to just be prepared as mentally as I can.

Thank you

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Re: Eviction Process advice by Ultimate M-Bone on November 3, 2009 @13:01 [ Reply ]
Have your tenants file with you that should have all their paperwork from the rental agreement to the pay/quit notice to rent pay record. Questions to be preparred for from the judge; 1.When was the last time you received any rent money from the tenant, 2. How much? 3. did you serve a pay/quit notice? 4. When and how did you serve it. 5. Are the tenants still in possession? 6. Do you own the property. That's about all I can think of. I am sure they will ask plenty more questions.

You should be fine with having a lawyer.

Re: Eviction Process advice by Someone Else - Guess Who (FL) on November 3, 2009 @13:18 [ Reply ]
First question. Do you want them as a tenant?
Sounds like the answer is no.

If they show up with the rent, refuse it citing their failure to comply with the 10 day notice (and it has been 10+ days and no compliance) which terminates the lease. If you take ONE PENNY from them, you have accepted them for another month AND essentially forgiven their transgression.

If you have to use a lawyer, make him or her file the papers TODAY. With a little research, you could preside over the eviction yourself. Look up the chapter on landlord-tenant laws in your state statutes and read it over and over until you got it.

The paperwork to file an eviction is so generic, your courthouse probably has the form for you - you just fill in the blanks. So if your lawyer is not on the ball (and that's what you pay them for) MAKE THEM GET ON THE BALL. In evictions, time is absolutely of the essence. That means that once the judge signs the eviction, the notice is officially served THAT DAY or first thing next morning.

The important thing is that you adhere to the laws of your state, document all activity in a journal, only communicate with the tenants in writing, only accept communications from them in writing, and DON'T ACCEPT THE RENT if you want them out and you have legal grounds to terminate the lease.

Hope this helps.

If you have any questions, I'll check back in about an hour.

Re: Eviction Process advice by Anonymous on November 3, 2009 @13:24 [ Reply ]
Don't accept partial payment. then you'll have to start over again.
Re: Eviction Process advice by Anonymous on November 3, 2009 @13:59 [ Reply ]
It depends on what you are evicting them for. Non-payment would be the easiest thing. Other violations are going to be harder. The "loopholes" tenants will use is like if you are evicting them for having a dog when the lease says no pets, it's harder to prove, and the tenants will say they were dogsitting. It will depend on the judge you end up in front of and who he believes. I don't think there is a good way to prepare for this mentally because worst case senerio is if you lost and were stuck with these loser tenants. Good luck!

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