I need to evict my roommate. I am in CA. The huge problem is that she is on the lease. However, I wonder that since she is in violation of some of the lease terms and engages in illegal activity, if it is a possibility. First off, she doesn't keep her area of the house clean. (It's horrifically filthy and smelly). And I am forever cleaning up after her. She has painted Black bats all over her walls. But the big thing is that she uses illegal drugs and opens the house to unsafe people, ie drug dealers. (And has given keys to them!) She is financially irresponsible, but that falls into the annoying category. She manages to pay rent at the last possible moment, but it completely stresses me out waiting and wondering. Again, I know that's just annoying and not illegal.
I am desperate to get her out of my life before the next crazy situation happens. Am I stuck until the lease is over?
Thank you for any insight.
If she's on the lease, then you have no more right to evict here than she has to evict you... You COULD have the landlord evict you BOTH. That might be better than living in your situation.
Roommate has deserted house leaving everything behind.When can I legally change lock?
I have a roommate who is on the lease, however she has deserted all of her belongings and left without paying rent or bills or past due amounts of money she owes me. How long am I legally required to wait until I remove her stuff from the house and change the locks? We have ceased to get along and she refuses to communicate with me in any way.
Any input on this is greatly appreciated.
Roommate left all things behind. When can I legally change locks?
I have a roommate who is on the lease, however she has deserted all of her belongings and left without paying rent or bills or past due amounts of money she owes me. How long am I legally required to wait until I remove her stuff from the house and change the locks? We have ceased to get along and she refuses to communicate with me in any way.
It's gotten to a point of rediculousness and I want to prepare for the worst.
Any input on this is greatly appreciated.
I am in CA.
You are in a tenuous position here. Since she was on the lease, you have no legal standing. You are not her landlord and, therefore, can not take any action against her. Furthermore, depending on the wording of your lease, you can be held responsible for the entire rental.
You NEED to talk with your landlord about formerly evicting her. Only after an eviction order is obtained can the LANDLORD remove her belongings and change the locks. Hopefully you can get the landlord to accept your paying only half the rent or maybe the lease will allow that so you need to read ytour lease as well.
Yes, in reality, the person does not have to return to a place they have legally rented for months, and should expect thier property to remain safe and secure.
I have a roommate who is on the lease, however she has deserted all of her belongings and left without paying rent or bills or past due amounts of money she owes me. How long am I legally required to wait until I remove her stuff from the house and change the locks? We have ceased to get along and she refuses to communicate with me in any way.
Any input on this is greatly appreciated.
All of these laws are making me so angry! I am the 'good tenant', I keep the place clean, I don't damage the place, I am responsible with all my bills, and yet she is the one who is more protected! I am starting to suspect that she has done this sort of thing before. Do I have no recourse or rights? I am expected to fit her irresponsibility bill so that this sort of behaivior is rewarded by the legal system? Garrr!
First, please don't start new threads for the same issue. If you want to post a followup, use the Answer This question options. I've merged the threads for you.
Your problem is not that her rights are more protected than yours. the problem is you have NO legal standing here as you were told this in answer to your first post 2 weeks ago. Have you spoken to the landlord yet? If not, why not? If yes, what did he say?
You have to understand that, since you are BOTH on the lease, then you both have equal rights as tenants. Any action taken against her MUST be initated and managed by the landlord. Why is that hard for you to understand?
There is one and only one recourse for you. If you are forced to pay the full rent because of her illegal actions, then you have grounds to sue her for her share of the rent.