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17 June 2012 | 19 replies
Patti if there are portable sheds and items that are YOUR PROPERTY not inside the mobile home you can take those as they are not the property of your tenant.You would have to make sure the tenant did not store anything of his inside those buildings.The reason you are getting trouble with the police is you are doing a "self-help" eviction which is against the law.When the landlords make a mistake they simply can't knock on the door and tell the tenant "I screwed up letting you rent here now get out now".Even if the tenant left a pro-bono attorney would have a field day with you for doing such things.If the tenant is doing drugs maybe you could file a report on them with the police and get them arrested.This is of course not legal advice of any kind.Trailers are a real tough business.You usually get transients and other unstable tenants that won't qualify for a regular apartment or renting a hotel by the week.You get a couple if nice folks but many are bad and trash the units.My mom's friends have been in the business of renting mobiles homes for 40 years and have about 50 or so.Just had one trashed like you are describing the other day.They buy the trailers real cheap because they know they will take a beating.Maybe the land the trailer sits on is worth a bunch of money.You could get this tenant out and sell the land and take the cash and invest in something with less of a headache.
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29 October 2015 | 96 replies
If a judgment is entered against you, the court has the power to liquidate your LLC to fulfill the judgment.
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22 December 2016 | 18 replies
First year teachers get sometimes less (ok, special case), and the Blockbuster store manager (they few that are left) probably gets around $12 to 14 an hour.
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7 September 2012 | 52 replies
Usually the only thing they can say is they haven't found anything else yet in their rent range or that you are holding the security deposit.If it's they haven't found anything the judge will give the eviction order or maybe one more week to pay up.If it's the security deposit issue the judge might order you to give back the deposit and the tenant to and the tenant to be out by a certain date.If the tenant is claiming they had to make repairs then the judge will ask for receipts from a valid business with a date and time and proof the tenant paid for the repairs.In all the years of the judges being on bench the last one in our area said they have seen the repair defense thousands of times but have never seen a tenant produce repair receipts.I am sure it has happened but it is rare.The judge will validate the receipts are not inflated receipts from uncle bubba their friend or that work was done and they said to bill the landlord when the tenant is claiming they paid out of pocket (trying to double dip and get a repair credit off rent and then stick landlord with the repair bill at the same time).Every area is different but this is how I see these cases go down in mine.If they mention the mold as said give back security deposit and tell them they need to move.Say the place can't be made safe while people are are living there or storing things there.Sounds like a professional tenant just yanking your chain and that you have an older building with issues and they are using that against you.No legal advice.
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21 September 2011 | 8 replies
You can get it as a spread around the yard or as bait traps or in straight liquid form.It's like crack for ants.
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5 October 2011 | 3 replies
There are clear laws in place for dealing with former-tenant property.Your case is a little confusing as the personal property arrived at the premises AFTER the tenant left, but I believe you're still obligated to:1) Notify the tenant you have his personal property2) Safely store the property (hint: you can charge him for storage)3) Hold onto the property for 15 - 18 days, depending on how you notified him. 4) If the property is valued at $300 or more, it must be auctioned off publicly.
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3 March 2013 | 4 replies
Don't get me wrong, they are an awesome place to work and it's great working for a family owned store.
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26 May 2017 | 16 replies
How also, if you store energy in batteries, sell it back to the utility company?
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19 April 2013 | 14 replies
If they do not want to use it then I will use it in another property or store it somewhere for future use.
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13 August 2012 | 71 replies
Scott, but I don't think you can buy beer with food stamps in any state, it would be illegal and it would be the store in the bag with the buyer here.