Posted on 06/26/2014 7:22:57 AM PDT by BenLurkin
My neighbor had an experience not too different from the movie. After she divorced she rented out a room in her house to a middle aged female who answered her ad. Took over 2 years to finally evict the deadbeat psycho. Worst part was the Sheriff informed her if she just changed the locks on her own and locked her out the psycho could probably have her fined and/or arrested.
So I guess, I can quit collecting snakes?
Some employers provide employees with housing as part of their compensation. When the employment ends the ex-employee is usually told to move out. If the employee refuses to move the landlord can not just come and put the employee out. The tenant who remains after being told to vacate is a tenant at sufferance. During the term of their employment, the employee has the legal right to live on the property under the term of their employment contract. Upon termination of employment, the employees right to possession under the employment contract ended and he becomes a tenant at sufferance. If the ex-empolyer wants to remove the former employee he would need to file a dispossessory affidavit with the court where the land is located.
She’d be a permanent resident in my flower bed if she tried this at my home.
no way! no changing the locks, no turning off utilities, no packing her stuff and moving it out... that will get the couple into a lot of trouble...
I always used the deposit for that approach.
It's unclear whether they even used an attorney. Are they recommending this in hindsight, or what?
Lot's of clever, imaginative replies. I have to wonder why this story captures such intelligent attention.
Interesting proposition, and they could possibly get her to leave for less, then CHANGE THE LOCKS. Have her sign something to show that she acknowledges their prior agreement for her to work for them has been terminated at the mutual concession of both parties.
Fantastic movie!! See on ACMAX 7/3 3AM
“I have to wonder why this story captures such intelligent attention.”
Survivor syndrome?
trying to get someone evicted can be a nightmare
I had a tenant who was throwing garbage all over, so the town issued me a summons to clean it up. When I was at the eviction hearing the judge would not evict him BECAUSE I have a “problem of my own” which was the ticket for all the garbage.
It took me 10 minutes of arguing that he was the one throwing the garbage around, and he could not live there and throw garbage around AND then claim I could not evict him because there was garbage around.
THANKFULLY I was aware that he also had some outstanding warrants for his arrest, and I told the judge he was about to be arrested as soon as he leave the courtroom. That was quite a shock to everyone in the courtroom and the judge AND the two police officers waiting to handcuff him...
Give Laz a call.
And if you slip the driver $100, you can keep the other $900
I see fumigating a house that way on TV but I have never seen it actually done around here. What is the purpose of it? Is it something that is done a lot in California and thus shows up on a lot of TV shows?
I've never seen it done either except on TV. I was just thinking about "How do you get rid of unwanted critters" and it popped into my mind.
And this story is why you never want to sublet a room in your house.
“I prefer not to.”
That is just toooooo funny!!!!!!!.
My abs have not had a work out like that in awhile.
CRAOIG’S LIST??? NO SALARY????? What the HELL did they EXPECT!!! They CREATED this monster!
The internet answers all things. It looks like the main bug which fumigation tents kill are drywood termites which live inside the house. Around here the termites are all subterranean so they live underground and commute into your house to eat. Thus local treatment is to either pump in a poison barrier around the foundation (something nearly every house around here has had done) or the more recent method of baiting and poisoning the nest. Separate the underground nests from the house and the worker termites inside won't stay for long.
I guess California has drywood termites living inside of houses so that's why it shows up on TV, like the "Chicago" palm trees in National Lampoon's Vacation.
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