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View Full Version : Next of kin, no lease, eviction, how much do I owe, if anything?


currupt
Mar 1, 2010, 10:07 PM
I have been living with my grandparents since I was born. When the last one to die was my grandfather in April 2008, I stayed in this apartment not paying rent because the landlord wanted to start a court case over it. I'm 19 now, and it's taken this long for the court case to finally be established. The rent is 720 a month, and they are going to court to claim the $15,000 or so they say I owe. I never signed a lease after he died. No relationship or contract has been established. I do have rights to this apartment of course, the court knows this and so do the landlord's lawyers. What I want to know is, can I still take over this apartment without paying the 15,000? A holdover proceeding had been started which I failed to show up to and the eviction notice is here. I can go back to court to get a show of cause started and reschedule the court case, but I don't know if I should, if I am just going to be told I have to pay the 15,000 or leave. I don't have the money to give them, I only have enough to start paying monthly rent right now. I want to know if I can go to court to keep the apartment and not pay the 15,000.
No lawyer would help me on this, not even the free ones (too complicated).

currupt
Mar 1, 2010, 10:24 PM
----BTW - This is in Queens NYC, NY.
Add info - My grandparents lease ended in September 2008 a few month after he died.
I'm not eligible for a one shot deal either.
I have gone to free and pro bono legal aid who would not help me with the case, it was too risky and complicated for them, so I either get advice like this or just forget it.
If I do in fact have to legally pay 15,000 - I can't so my only option is to leave. That's all I'm trying to figure out right now.

excon
Mar 2, 2010, 09:25 AM
If I do in fact have to legally pay 15,000 - I can't so my only option is to leave. That's all I'm trying to figure out right now.Hello currupt:

You're going to have to pay rent for the time you lived there. No court is going to rule that you can live there for free.

excon