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Re: What are my rights? According Texas Hotel laws - Landlord Forum thread 349416

Re: What are my rights? According Texas Hotel laws by Anonymous on November 25, 2016 @18:17

                              
Hotels are NOT bound by the laws that rental properties must adhere to.

Yes,my hey can decide ...even for no reason...to stop allowing you to be a guest there. Especially if they feel your (or daughter) behavior is out of line...yes, they can refuse to allow you to remain a guest.

You have no lease. You do not even have an implied lease like a person renting an apartment would have.

If you want the protection of the state law concerning tenants...then you have to BE a tenant. Right now you are a hotel guest...nothing more.
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Re: What are my rights? According Texas Hotel laws by Risha H (Texas) on November 26, 2016 @11:33 [ Reply ]
That's all fine and dandy but regardless to their ridiculous reason for wanting us to leave, they still, by law, have proper procedures to abide by and that's what they are failing to do. If they want to handle ANY kind of business with me, then they HAVE GOT TO do it the right way. But according to the Texas Hotel Laws and the Texas Lodging
    Re: What are my rights? According Texas Hotel laws by Risha H (Texas) on November 26, 2016 @11:46 [ Reply ]
    According to the Texas Hotel and Lodging Association, they did nothing by the book. Now, I'm not the one to complain but what's wrong is wrong. PERIOD! You say I'm not able to be treated as a tenant because I'm a hotel guest, but according to the Texas Hotel Laws, the tenants must be given reasonable notice by the hotel to the guest about eviction, which they didn't do. According to the Texas Hotel Laws, they are to give me 5 days after the notice to leave, which they are not doing. According to the Texas Hotel Laws, the situation changes after you've been a tenant for 30 days, with all the rights of any other tenant. According to the Texas Hotel and Lodging Association, the fact that the innkeeper has a legal right to evict someone does not give The Innkeeper the right to carry out the eviction in a manner that would place the person(s) in a position of harm. Which is what's happening. I have a special needs child and I have health issues myself. If they felt like my child and I were 'out of control' and that the housekeeper felt threatened, why say something about it 4 days later? Why wasn't the police called? Why wasn't there any charges filed? They ARE NOT following proper procedures and that's all I ask them to do.
      Re: What are my rights? According Texas Hotel laws by Garry on November 26, 2016 @14:02 [ Reply ]
      Regardless of how you believe the Texas hotels laws read, the hotel gave you notice to be out at the end of your current week. If you are not out by then, they will call the police, who will escort you and all your belongings out the front door, and off the property. If you fight the cops, you could go to jail, where you can stay for free, and they will even provide you free meals. And your special needs child could be put into a government agency facility till you get out of jail. The best thing you can do for yourself and your child, is find another hotel to stay at, BEFORE the police are called. THEN, if you want to sue the hotel for damages you feel you have suffered, you have every right to do so.
    Re: What are my rights? According Texas Hotel laws by Anonymous on November 26, 2016 @15:14 [ Reply ]
    This is a landlord forum, not a hotel forum. Let the OP go to a hotel forum, free of charge.
Re: What are my rights? According Texas Hotel laws by Anonymous on August 23, 2017 @14:06 [ Reply ]
My husband and I have lived in this motel for four years,my husband is the maintenance here and works his rear off .He's 63 years old and does have alot of medical issues.The landlord threatening to kick us out cause my husband took a few days off because of his medical issues can

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