By Katie Penny
I’m getting evicted! What is happening?
Eviction takes place when a person who is leasing something (usually a house or residence of some kind) ceases to retain the right to lease that something from the person leasing it to them. In other words, you can get evicted when your lease is broken.
A lease is a contract, just like most contracts, that has a party on either side: a lessee (the one paying for the use of the thing) and a lessor (the one accepting payment for the use of the thing). Unlike a sale, which exchanges ownership of an object, a lease exchanges simply the possession of the object. The lessee pays for the right to possess the object, and the lessor accepts payment in exchange for giving up possession of the object.
To make this easier, I will refer to the lessee as the occupant and the lessor as the landlord, and assume we’re discussing an apartment.
Leases do not necessarily have to be for specific amounts of time. Both the occupant and the landlord have certain obligations under the lease.
For example, the landlord must maintain the apartment in a condition suitable for the purpose for which the apartment was leased (usually, for living in), among other things. The occupant, for example, has a duty to pay rent, to be prudent in his use of the apartment, and to return the apartment in the same condition, except for normal wear and tear.
However, the lease can be terminated for various reasons. The term of the lease may simply have run—if it was merely for a year, then the passage of a year will mark the termination of the lease. If the occupant has failed to pay rent, the lease may be terminated because the occupant has violated the lease contract.
The lease contract may contain any number of reasons for which the lease may be terminated, so if you want to know how you can violate the terms of your lease, simply read it and see what was included when you signed it.
Once the lease has been terminated for any of those reasons, the landlord may deliver written notice to the occupant that he must vacate the premises within 5 days of delivery of the notice. If the landlord cannot locate the occupant, this notice can be attached to the door. At that point, the occupant has 5 days to vacate the premises and “deliver” it back to the landlord (“deliver” just means vacate and let the landlord take control of the apartment).
If the occupant does not vacate the premises within 5 days of the notice of eviction from the landlord, then the landlord can file suit for eviction in court, and serve a “rule to show cause” on the occupant. That means the landlord is demanding that the occupant come to a court hearing and “show cause” why the occupant should not be evicted.
The court hearing can be as soon as 3 days after the landlord serves the Rule to Show Cause on the occupant (which can also, if the occupant cannot be found, be attached to the door of the apartment). At that hearing, the occupant, if he believes he is being wrongfully evicted, should present evidence to the court showing that he did pay his rent, or show any opposition to the reasons that the landlord is attempting to have the occupant evicted. If the occupant either does not show up at the hearing, or the court decides the landlord is right about the eviction reasons, then the landlord will get a “judgment of eviction.”
If the landlord gets a judgment of eviction, the occupant has 24 hours to vacate the apartment. If the occupant still does not vacate within 24 hours after the judgment, then the court can immediately issue a warrant which orders the sheriff to “deliver possession of the premises.”
The sheriff delivering possession means the sheriff will move all of the property out of the apartment, and he can break any locked windows or doors in order to do it. It is possible for the occupant to appeal the court’s Judgment of Eviction, but even appealing the decision will not keep the sheriff from executing the warrant and moving the occupant's possessions out unless bond is posted with the court.
The worst thing of all is that you can waive the right to five days’ notice in the lease itself, and the landlord can simply file the Rule to Show Cause with the court without giving you any notice of eviction beforehand. This all seems really mean of the landlord.
However, remember that all of the things that the landlord is able to do, and all of the rights that the landlord has over you as his tenant, were given to him when you yourself signed the lease and entered into this contract.
I understand that most of us have very little power of negotiation with standard lease contracts, but if you actually read your lease and figure out what will lead to the landlord being able to evict you, it may help you avoid pitfalls and understand how to avoid getting into such an uncomfortable situation in the first place.
Monday, September 21, 2009
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