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Tenants not leaving! what to do?
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<blockquote data-quote="blr_p" data-source="post: 985300" data-attributes="member: 10952"><p>True and thats why at the time of drafting the lease much effort must be spent into making it as watertight as possible. A leaky agreement once signed to may not be defendable later. One quickly appreciates the meaning of words here, just one can either make or break everything.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Aha, so if the lease is valid then it becomes harder per you to get a tennant to leave. Since salluks said anyone can give 2 months notice, he techincally does have the right to ask them to vacate as signed to. But if they disagree then what can he do ? </p><p></p><p>I don't think its because of the transferring of ownership bit, btw ownership is <strong>never</strong> transferred (as you alone hold the property deed), only possession is transferred. But in real terms its because given the speed at which the courts operate here that clause on its own is pretty much worthless. In practice the term of the lease is the real limit, it can be pretty hard to get someone to vacate midway.</p><p>@salluks can you answer the questions asked earlier ?</p><p>Has the lease lapsed ?</p><p></p><p>or have you decided that within the lease period that you don't want them anymore and given them notice to leave.</p><p></p><p>And most important of all is the lease still valid or has it expired ?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="blr_p, post: 985300, member: 10952"] True and thats why at the time of drafting the lease much effort must be spent into making it as watertight as possible. A leaky agreement once signed to may not be defendable later. One quickly appreciates the meaning of words here, just one can either make or break everything. Aha, so if the lease is valid then it becomes harder per you to get a tennant to leave. Since salluks said anyone can give 2 months notice, he techincally does have the right to ask them to vacate as signed to. But if they disagree then what can he do ? I don't think its because of the transferring of ownership bit, btw ownership is [b]never[/b] transferred (as you alone hold the property deed), only possession is transferred. But in real terms its because given the speed at which the courts operate here that clause on its own is pretty much worthless. In practice the term of the lease is the real limit, it can be pretty hard to get someone to vacate midway. @salluks can you answer the questions asked earlier ? Has the lease lapsed ? or have you decided that within the lease period that you don't want them anymore and given them notice to leave. And most important of all is the lease still valid or has it expired ? [/QUOTE]
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