I need help

AleksandarN

Starter
I have a family business (room and board housing). I currently setting us a warning system for those residents that I have. I wondering if some one can look over my Offical Warning letter and tell me if it is ok.


OFFICAL WARNING





I hereby give _________________ notice of eviction if the rules outlined are not followed. If ______________ does break those rules he will be given an eviction notice without further warning.



I did not paste the rules on the warning but it is in the notice. The rules are also posted in the house aswell. There is no lease aggreements with the tenants ether. Please if anyone can give me feed back I would be grateful.

I also changed it since it sounding too much like an eviction notice
 
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There are a lot of Landlord/Tenant rules and regulations you must follow and they vary by state. You need to check with an attorney or at least a para-legal to find out what you have to say, how you have to say it, etc. Not having a lease agreement doesn't keep you from being held responsible for a lot of those rules and regulations.

It's better to be safe than sorry.

;)
 
VF21 said:
There are a lot of Landlord/Tenant rules and regulations you must follow and they vary by state. You need to check with an attorney or at least a para-legal to find out what you have to say, how you have to say it, etc. Not having a lease agreement doesn't keep you from being held responsible for a lot of those rules and regulations.

It's better to be safe than sorry.

;)


Thanks for your feedback. Ok that is what I thought I just do not like to shell out that kind of money. My attorney charges me enough money. I just thought that since this is a simple warning notice that it would be ok and not illegal in anyway. I also changed it since it sounding too much like an eviction notice
 
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I had a friend who took a couple of short-cuts in trying to get rid of a "room-mate" ... he ended up living there for almost six months and causing all kinds of havoc because she didn't dot all the i's and cross all the t's.
 
What you need to do is contact the Civil Division of whatever county you live in. They are happy to advise you as to what your rights/limits are as a landlord or tenant. I am a dispatcher and this comes up a lot... There is no fee to call the Civil Division (no need for lawyer) and they should be able to help. Good luck.
 
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