A Landlord's Guide to
the Eviction Process
by Gerald
Mason
This article is aimed at owners, who want
that their tenants to move out of a property. For removing the tenants
from the property, landlords must utilize the help of eviction process.
With the help of this process, also known as Summary Proceedings, the
lawful owner of the property takes possession very quickly.
Many Steps Involved in Eviction Process
There are several steps described in the overall landlords guide to the
eviction process. It begins with the landlord issuing an eviction notice.
After the notice, a series of court appearances and a trial takes place.
The chances of your success depend much on how better you present your
arguments to prove your case. You may get an order of eviction if you
succeed in satisfying the magistrate. After the issuance of this order,
it is the responsibility of a court officer to vacate the rental property
by removing the tenants and their belongings. However, in most of the
cases, long before the stage of physically evacuating arrives, landlords
and tenants agree on a settlement. Landlords should never try to physically
evacuate the person.
When You Can Start The Eviction process
According to the landlords guide to the eviction process there are seven
reasons to start the eviction process. Here is a list of the reasons.
1. Not paying the amount of rent.
2. Continuously damaging the property
3. Any severe health hazard.
4. Involvement in any kind of illegal drug
activities.
5. Violating any of the terms of the lease.
6. Unauthorized entry such as forceful entry.
7. Not moving out even after expiry of lease
term.
How To Evict More Than One Tenant
Is it possible to remove tenants, who are paying partial rent, just because
their roommate has left? The landlords guide to the eviction process says
yes, you can, because getting the full amount of rent is your right. You
must include a joint and several liability clause in the agreement that
gives you the right of collecting the full amount of rent from any of
the tenants. In addition, in the case of non-payment of rent or violation
of any other term, this clause also gives you the right to force any or
all of the tenants to move out.
How Much Time To Wait Before Issuing
Notice
The landlord must wait for a definite time period for each reason. Depending
upon the reason, this period may be one day, one week, or even one month.
David Gass is President of Business Credit
Services, Inc. His company publishes a free weekly e-newsletter on Small
Business Consulting at their web site http://www.smallbusinessconsulting.com
Article Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/A-Landlord-s-Guide-To-The-Eviction-Process/58201
Back
to Articles Page

Completely Customizable
Landlord Enterprise is designed to work how you work - customize
data entry fields and use your own forms. Powerful late fee and damage
deposit calculation settings and custom lease parameters make
setting up your rentals a snap.
Everything You Need to be Successful
Track Tenants, Leases, Units, Vendors & Contacts, Income, Expenses,
Payments, Occupants, Vehicles, Pets, Incidents, References, Photos, Tasks,
Reminders, Contact History, Repairs & Maintenance - the list goes on
and on!



"Suits Me in Every
Way!"
"It keeps records for each building and townhome. It keeps all of
my accounts straight, and even lets me know when they are late and prints
rent receipts. It allows me to send records to my book-keeper and the
(property) owner. They both appreciate the email PDF documents. The
program suits me in every way."
Colleen Barker, RealVest Management - Pompano Beach, FL