mim not the weirdo who bumped this thread but I confess I am curious to see how this all worked out for OP.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just file multiple cases in different courts—they don’t talk to each other. Hell, spell the defendants’ names wrong. If you keep
Throwing out a bunch of darts something will eventually stick
Are you my slumlord’s lawyer? This is 100% his tactic.
Why are you dredging up a 6 month old post just to make this inane comment??
Stick with current threads, stop digging up old ones that nobody cares about, least of all YOU and that ridiculous comment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just file multiple cases in different courts—they don’t talk to each other. Hell, spell the defendants’ names wrong. If you keep
Throwing out a bunch of darts something will eventually stick
Are you my slumlord’s lawyer? This is 100% his tactic.
Anonymous wrote:Just file multiple cases in different courts—they don’t talk to each other. Hell, spell the defendants’ names wrong. If you keep
Throwing out a bunch of darts something will eventually stick
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP is in MD. Go file the papers today. Your soonest court date will be 6 weeks from now, and by then you'll probalby own it. In the meantime, the tenants will get a notice from the Sheriff about the court date, and that may at least help them see you're serious.
Then, each month rent is missed, file a new case with the court. They all take so logn that you'll have a few at various stages of the process. If the tenant pays nothing, you're looking at 12 weeks to get the sheriff to evict (after court judgement and opportunity to pay.. total is about 12 weeks). If they pay fro the month owed in _that case_, it stops it and on to the next month and the next case. Once you get 3 cases in your favor in 12 months, you can proceed to eviction without a new case. Expect 4-6 weeks from teh time you have the order to when the Sheriff can actually show up.
Professional deadbeat tenants know this and work the system.
This is the worst advice I’ve ever seen on this forum. Please OP, follow this advice and report back to let us know how it goes.
You should make it a contingency to have the current owner evict the deadbeatz
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With all due respect, why the rush? You bought the property from an owner who probably has problems far worse then you. What goal do you have? What is the cost of waiting? You knew the risk of foreclosure purchases, so don't say to start repairing.
OP doesn't give a %^& about the owner possibly falling on hard times -- just want to kick them out before even owning it.
Meh. I bought a foreclosed condo. The couple who owned it just completely walked away from it when they divorced. Neither was going to pay anything. There wasn't any financial difficulty, they just didn't want the condo any longer. They had put basically nothing down and it would cost more than that to sell it. It didn't make sense to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With all due respect, why the rush? You bought the property from an owner who probably has problems far worse then you. What goal do you have? What is the cost of waiting? You knew the risk of foreclosure purchases, so don't say to start repairing.
OP doesn't give a %^& about the owner possibly falling on hard times -- just want to kick them out before even owning it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP is in MD. Go file the papers today. Your soonest court date will be 6 weeks from now, and by then you'll probalby own it. In the meantime, the tenants will get a notice from the Sheriff about the court date, and that may at least help them see you're serious.
Then, each month rent is missed, file a new case with the court. They all take so logn that you'll have a few at various stages of the process. If the tenant pays nothing, you're looking at 12 weeks to get the sheriff to evict (after court judgement and opportunity to pay.. total is about 12 weeks). If they pay fro the month owed in _that case_, it stops it and on to the next month and the next case. Once you get 3 cases in your favor in 12 months, you can proceed to eviction without a new case. Expect 4-6 weeks from teh time you have the order to when the Sheriff can actually show up.
Professional deadbeat tenants know this and work the system.
This is the worst advice I’ve ever seen on this forum. Please OP, follow this advice and report back to let us know how it goes.
Anonymous wrote:OP is in MD. Go file the papers today. Your soonest court date will be 6 weeks from now, and by then you'll probalby own it. In the meantime, the tenants will get a notice from the Sheriff about the court date, and that may at least help them see you're serious.
Then, each month rent is missed, file a new case with the court. They all take so logn that you'll have a few at various stages of the process. If the tenant pays nothing, you're looking at 12 weeks to get the sheriff to evict (after court judgement and opportunity to pay.. total is about 12 weeks). If they pay fro the month owed in _that case_, it stops it and on to the next month and the next case. Once you get 3 cases in your favor in 12 months, you can proceed to eviction without a new case. Expect 4-6 weeks from teh time you have the order to when the Sheriff can actually show up.
Professional deadbeat tenants know this and work the system.