How to deal with malicious tenants..?
Well everyone, I know this is a really random spot to ask this but I'm in a bit of a situation where I'm not sure what to do about it and it I noticed that a lot of people offer help when people need it on this forum (airsoft scams, personal loses, health problems) which is great, so I'd figure that someone might have experience about this or possibly be a lawyer/attorney.
I'm not an expert in the landlord/tenant stuff but see enough of it to at least suggest you guys read the CA landlord/tenant handbook and from there.
I would file a report for the stolen items asap. Show the officer taking the report the lease which has the appliances listed. I then would immediatley file a small claims suit for the same items. Use those two as leverage for them to move out.
You just got killed by a Daewoo Lanos...How You like me now?
[quote="ukau"]I would file a report for the stolen items asap. Show the officer taking the report the lease which has the appliances listed. I then would immediatley file a small claims suit for the same items. Use those two as leverage for them to move out.
Thanks for the feedback. She was making monthly mortgage payments but stopped when the mortgage loan got transferred when Washington Mutual got bought out, so it got transferred to EMC and they were being hard to work with and would refuse to work with her and wouldn't take any payments unless it was the full amount due. Whole situation is just shitty, heh. Would filing a police report on the fridge even work out? If so that would be a good idea.
[quote="KaLTHRaX"][quote="ukau"]I would file a report for the stolen items asap. Show the officer taking the report the lease which has the appliances listed. I then would immediatley file a small claims suit for the same items. Use those two as leverage for them to move out.
You just got killed by a Daewoo Lanos...How You like me now?
not trying to cuase an issue here maybe its by county but 2 brokers, fair housing and 2 lawyers said other wise
after reading that law, it states first year of owner ship and/or with out consent of owner. the bank doesnt own the home and this isnt the first year of ownership of the mortgage, im belive as tehy lived thier prevously
Well, I really hate to say this;
go up to the door with the real steel and tell them to get out...lol
[quote="aidan2424"]go up to the door with the real steel and tell them to get out...lol[/quote]
HeadOnTactical.com
[quote="Andrew"][quote="aidan2424"]go up to the door with the real steel and tell them to get out...lol[/quote]
[quote="Andrew"][quote="aidan2424"]go up to the door with the real steel and tell them to get out...lol[/quote]
it made me fall off my chair, you know it's legit when you fall off your chair :roll:
God save us everyone will be burning inside the fires of a thousand suns.
Definitely, see a lawyer. Check in the yellow pages for legal aide. One thing you've got to remember, you've got something to lose here, a house. The renters basically have nothing to lose. You want to make sure you've got all your paperwork perfect, so they don't have any wiggle room. Whatever you do, don't lose your temper and do something that puts you in the wrong, because the renters will exploit the hell out of it. I have some friends who've been in situations like this. It sucks, but that's the way it is.