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EVICTIONS AND FLORIDA EVIDENCE LAW
09-03-2025
EVICTION
09-03-2025

Most property managers have a solid handle as to what their attorney will require before filing an eviction for nonpayment of rent. In that situation, property managers expect to fax over a Three Day Notice for Nonpayment of rent, the lease and sometimes the payment ledger. Assuming the Three Day Notice, the lease and the payment ledger present no issues; your attorney will file the case. After a while this routine becomes like clockwork for the property manager. Like all good things, this walk in paradise will come to an end, once the property manager attempts to file an eviction based upon a noncompliance of the lease terms by the resident other then for nonpayment of the rent. In this situation, a good attorney looking to protect the property manager will refuse to file an eviction based upon a Seven Day Notice of Termination of Lease unless all of the statutory requirements have been satisfied, and the attorney is certain that there is enough proof to win in court. 

Let Your Attorney Protect You

You may be wondering about who or what your attorney is protecting you from when your lawyer declines to file an eviction based upon a weak Seven Day Notice case. First and foremost, your attorney with be protecting you from yourself! That is right. A property manager can be his or her own worst enemy by impulsively filing an eviction in the heat of the moment. In those moments, the property manager is so focused on removing the bad resident that a shutdown occurs when the attorney advises that the case will likely not hold up in court. The seasoned attorney will stand up to the manager and respectfully warn that the manager could be on the hook for substantial legal fees if the resident contests the case and hires an attorney. Worse yet, you could be wasting valuable time, because the bad resident will still be residing in the unit, creating the same problems and making life very stressful. The solution? Let your attorney do his or her job in these kinds of eviction cases. Your attorney must be given proof of the noncompliance by the resident so that the judge in your eviction matter will rule in your favor. Florida law has some very clear guidelines as to what type of proof can be submitted to the judge during the eviction trial. In a nutshell, your proof is the means by which your lawyer can capture the attention of the judge to rule in your favor. The tricky part is turning your proof into evidence that is reviewed by the judge. If your proof is not considered evidence, then it is of absolutely no value to you. The purpose of this article is to provide property managers with a basic understanding of Florida Evidence law, so that they can successfully litigate their eviction case if and when a court hearing becomes necessary.

The Florida Evidence Code

The Florida Evidence Code was adopted by the Florida Legislature in 1976 and became effective in 1979. The evidentiary provisions are found in Florida Statutes Chapter 90. Many of these provisions have procedural components and therefore have been adopted by the Florida Supreme Court as rules of procedure. The Code in Sections 90.201 through 90.207 authorizes a court to treat something as fact without the need for further proof at trial; this is called judicial notice. The court can take judicial notice of a matter at anytime during your hearing. Usually these are rules of the Florida Supreme Court, acts of the Florida Legislature or Florida Ordinances. The Court can also take judicial notice of facts that are easily ascertainable, such as the fact that July 4, 2010 was a Sunday. Property managers will rarely if ever be lucky enough to have their key evidence judicially noticed at trial. The property manager who is dealing with a resident hosting loud parties will not have the evidence regarding the noise judicially noticed; such a noncompliance will have to be proven by testimony of witnesses or some other form of evidence.

Documentary Evidence

Todd and Lisa live in two separate second floor units at the Lakes of Transylvania apartment complex. Sam is their downstairs neighbor. Sam is often heard yelling while on his cell phone out in the common areas and playing loud music very late at night inside his apartment, along with excessive guest traffic in and out of his apartment. Todd and Lisa complained to the apartment manager, who correctly recommended that they call the police and obtain further proof in regard to Sam’s obnoxious conduct. Todd and Lisa also began playing private detective. Todd found an old tape recorder, and when Sam acted up again one night, Todd turned the machine on and recorded the loud music along with Sam yelling profanities. Meanwhile, Lisa snapped a bunch of pictures which showed at least 30 people near the front door of Sam’s apartment with some of those 30 people inside the unit.

Laying the Foundation

Fast forward to Sam’s eviction trial. In order for the tape recording and photographs to be admitted into evidence, your eviction attorney must lay a foundation through witnesses. All that fancy language means is that your eviction attorney will need to ask Todd and Lisa very specific questions prior to the judge allowing the evidence to be admitted. For example, Todd will be asked questions about how he physically recorded the tape and kept custody of the tape; he will be asked if he ever heard Sam’s voice in the past and how many times he has heard it. Then Todd will be asked if heard the recording which has been listed as an exhibit. The attorney would then ask Todd if he recognizes the voice, and finally Todd would be asked whose voice it actually was. Finally, the eviction attorney would request that the judge enter the tape recording into evidence. With regard to Lisa’s photographs, she would be asked if she was familiar with the photographs, how the photographs were developed, if and how she was familiar with the area contained in the photographs, and if the photographs accurately depict what Lisa saw on the date and time of the incident. One other key point to remember: if the resident that you are trying to evict attempts to offer impermissible evidence at trial, your eviction attorney needs to object at the hearing, or you will have waived your right to contest that evidence in any appeal. Suppose Todd or Lisa failed appear in court, like so many other resident witnesses who tell a property manager that they will attend court and testify against the resident that you are evicting. There would be hearsay implications if Todd or Lisa failed to attend the eviction hearing, which leads us to our next evidence issue.

WHAT IS HEARSAY?

The hearsay rule in Sections 90.801 through 90.806 of the Florida Statutes prohibit admission of oral or written out of court statements to prove the truth of the matter being asserted, but out of court statements may be admitted for a purpose other than proving the truth of the matter asserted if the statements are relevant to prove a material fact and are not outweighed by any prejudice. Some property managers assume that hearsay means that a person told you something and you are prevented from admitting that statement into evidence at a court hearing. That is not true if that witness is in court with you. The reason is simple. If the witness cannot testify at trial and submit to cross-examination by the opposing party, then the statement is inadmissible. Out of a principle of fairness, the law gives those being accused the right of cross-examination. In the above example, had Todd or Lisa failed to appear in court, the photographs or tape recording would have been inadmissible, since Sam would not have been able to cross-examine Todd or Lisa. This same principle applies to the property manager who takes pictures of a unit after the resident vacates for purpose of proving damages made to the property by the former resident. Take the pictures yourself if feasible, because a third party may not be associated with you three years later. You might not be able to locate that witness, and if you do, he still may not show up in court, even if subpoenaed.

HEARSAY MISCONCEPTIONS?

Perhaps the biggest myth regarding hearsay is that you can use a police report in court as proof without the police officer who signed the report being present. Make no mistake about this: police reports are not an exception to the “hearsay” rule in Florida. The same holds true for repair bills. A representative from the company that undertook the repair must appear in court to testify. The same holds true for written statements from residents. The property manager must understand that obtaining signed; notarized letters from your residents loaded with complaints against another resident will not make their way into evidence. Load those complaining residents into your van and take them to court, because they will be required to testify, or you can kiss your eviction goodbye…unless you were savvy enough to obtain a police report and subpoena the officer! Florida law permits some exceptions to the “hearsay” rule, which include statements for the purpose of medical diagnosis and treatment, statement of a child abuse victim 11 years of age or less, and business records made at or near the time of the event, by a person with knowledge, kept in the course of normal business activity, provided that it was a regular practice of the business to make such a record.

 

LAW OFFICES OF HEIST, WEISSE & WOLK, PLLC

“Serving the Property Management Professional”

 www.evict.com      www.evicttv.com      www.evictforms.com      info@evict.com

EVICTION MOTIONS YOUR ATTORNEY WILL FILE
09-03-2025
EVICTION
09-03-2025

Most property managers understand the eviction process in very general terms. They know that a Three Day Notice to Pay rent must be served upon the resident prior to filing a nonpayment eviction action. Likewise, virtually all property managers understand that the final stage of the eviction process involves the sheriff executing the writ of possession. Unfortunately, many property managers do not have a real clue as to what takes place during the time in between the time an eviction starts and is completed. Why is this “in between time” so important? If your eviction attorney navigates through this process skillfully, they not only help you prevail in court, they can shorten the eviction process, so that you can place somebody in a unit who is not living rent free. It is not enough for a property manager to grasp that there is important work to be performed by your eviction attorney in the period after an eviction action is started. A property manager should also have a solid grasp as to what goes on during this “in between period”.

Why, you ask? First, you will be better able manage your property, because the timing of the eviction process will not be a mystery to you. This knowledge will allow you to plan ahead and better organize and budget for your property accordingly. Your boss or owner and those you deal with at the corporate headquarters will also appreciate that you are able to explain to them in detailed terms the status of the eviction case against your residents. They will have comfort that their property manager is on top of things, and it will please them that you have made it a priority to remove the residents who are living “rent free”. Central to understanding the “in between” period of the eviction process is learning how motions are strategically used to advance the eviction effort.

The Motion for Default

Lou missed his February rent payment. You served him a proper Three Day Notice to Pay Rent which has expired. You have now asked your attorney to file an eviction action. The eviction is filed in court on Monday, February 8th. The Clerk of the Court mails Lou a copy of the eviction complaint and summons which Lou receives on Tuesday, February 9th. The process server delivers the eviction complaint and summons to Lou on Wednesday, February 10. In the meantime, Lou has decided not to respond to the eviction complaint and has tossed his copies in to the waste basket. Florida law requires that the resident respond to the eviction complaint within 5 business days after being served with the eviction complaint. Failure on the part of Lou to respond within the allotted time will subject Lou to a “Default”, which may be entered Clerk of the Court after the submission of the Manager’s Motion for Default. The word “default” sounds like a mysterious legal term to many. It is not! A default simply means that one has failed to perform an obligation. In the context of an eviction, the resident’s obligation is to respond to the Clerk of the Court within five business days after being served with the eviction complaint. If not, the resident will then be in default. In fact, on the eviction summons, the resident is instructed to send the Clerk of the Court reasons why they should not be evicted.

Now what? The answer is simple. Your attorney may file a Motion for Default on February 18th (the sixth business day after service of process). With the exception of a few counties in Florida, the date the resident is sent a mailed copy of the eviction complaint from the Clerk of the Court is irrelevant. The key date for purposes of when the Motion for Default will be ripe is the date the resident was served with the eviction complaint and summons by the process server. In the case of Lou, the key date for timing purposes is February 10th; the date Lou was served with the eviction papers. On February 18th, five business days have passed without Lou responding to the Clerk of the Court. Now your attorney should file a Motion for Default with the following language: “Plaintiff moves for an entry of a Default by the Clerk against Defendant for failure to serve any paper on the undersigned or file any paper as required by law. I do hereby certify that no copy of the answer or other pleading of the Defendant in the above styled cause has been served upon the Plaintiff or his/her attorney, to the time of the filing of the above Motion For Default”. Once the Clerk of the Court enters the Default, the Judge will then sign the Final Judgment for Eviction, which will authorize the Clerk to issue the writ of possession to the Sheriff.

Motion for Default and Default Judgment

The resident has answered the eviction complaint. What does your eviction attorney do now? Section 83.60 (2) of the Florida Statutes answers that question.   Section 83.60 (2) contains the following: “In an action by the manager for possession of a dwelling unit, if the resident interposes any defense other than payment, the resident shall pay into the registry of the court the accrued rent as alleged in the complaint or as determined by the court and the rent which accrues during the pendency of the proceeding, when due. The clerk shall notify the resident of such requirement in the summons. Failure of the resident to pay the rent into the registry of the court or to file a motion to determine the amount of rent to be paid into the registry within 5 days, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, after the date of service of process constitutes an absolute waiver of the resident's defenses other than payment, and the manager is entitled to an immediate default judgment for removal of the resident with a writ of possession to issue without further notice or hearing thereon. In the event a motion to determine rent is filed, documentation in support of the allegation that the rent as alleged in the complaint is in error is required. Public housing residents or residents receiving rent subsidies shall be required to deposit only that portion of the full rent for which the resident is responsible pursuant to federal, state, or local program in which they are participating”.

The above statutory language requires conventional property residents to deposit into the Court Registry the rent alleged in the eviction complaint and all rent that becomes due in the future while the lawsuit is ongoing. According to Section 83.60 (2), if the resident files a motion to determine rent, they must attach sufficient documentation supporting the position that the rent owed as alleged in the complaint is wrong. Consider the following scenario: Arthur is served with his eviction papers on March 14th. The manager alleges that one full month of rent has not been paid. On March 18th Arthur files his answer with the court. Arthur deposits no money into the Court Registry and briefly writes that that he will receive his tax refund check soon and requests a court hearing. Arthur responded in time to avoid a default being entered against him by the Clerk of the Court. What course of action will your attorney take in this case? After five business days have elapsed from the date of service or process, your attorney will file with the Court a Motion for Default and Default Judgment. Your attorney in that motion should request that the Judge enter the default and enter a default final judgment for eviction. The motion may read in part like the following: Plaintiff moves for entry of a default and default judgment by the Court against Defendant for failure to deposit the rent amount alleged in the complaint into the Court Registry as required by Florida Statute 83.60(2)”. Likewise, in the above example, If Arthur had written that he is requesting a hearing to determine rent because he disagreed with the amount owed, but gave no reasons why he believed that to be true, then your attorney would add the following language to the above mentioned Motion for Default and Default Judgment: “Defendant has attached no documentation showing the rent amount alleged in the complaint to be in error, as required by Florida Statute 83.60(2)”. It is also important to note that some judges prefer that the eviction attorney file a Motion To Strike Defendant’s Answer and For Order Entering Default and Default Judgment instead of the motion for default and default judgment. Both motions have the same basic language, except that the Motion to Strike requests the Judge to “strike” the resident’s pleading because they are defective. If the above motions are granted, then the judge will sign the final judgment of eviction, authorizing the Clerk of the Court to issue the writ of possession to the Sheriff. These motions are vital, because you can often navigate through the eviction process without the need to attend mediation and/or court hearings, which saves you time and money!

Motion for Default and Default Judgment for Failure to Deposit the accrued rent into the Court Registry

Elvis, your resident, was served with an eviction complaint on July 28th because he has not paid the July rent. The next day Elvis files an answer to the eviction complaint with the Clerk of the Courts. He points out that the Three Day Notice to Pay rent was not prepared properly, and he deposits the July rent into the Court Registry. It is now August 10th, and rent is due on the first of each month according to the lease. No additional monies have been deposited by Elvis into the Court registry. At this point a seasoned eviction attorney will file a Motion for Default for Failure to Deposit the Accrued Rent into the Court Registry. While sounding technical, this motion is easy enough to understand. Florida Statute 83.60 (2) requires the residents who are defending their evictions to deposit not only the rent alleged in the complaint, but all future rents as it comes due while the lawsuit is pending.

Under this scenario, many judges will grant the eviction without a hearing (forcing Elvis to leave the building), since his failure to deposit accrued August rent into the Court Registry resulted in a WAIVER OF ALL DEFENSES other than payment, according to Section 83.60(2). Elvis’ defective Three day notice defense is not a defense of payment, and therefore, that defense will not be available for use by Elvis. The motion may contain language like this: “Plaintiff moves for entry of a default and default judgment by the Court against Defendant for failure to deposit the accrued August-2010 rent into the Court Registry as required by Florida Statute 83.60 (2).

 

A motion for disbursement of the Court Registry funds is also usually filed at the same time the motion for default is filed. Unless there is some real dispute as to whether the money deposited into the Court Registry is actually owing, the disbursement order will also often be granted without a hearing. However, a judge will sometimes grant the eviction without a hearing, but withhold ruling on disbursement of the Court Registry funds until a future hearing is held, particularly if the resident is complaining about alleged problems with the apartment or indicating other disputes.

 

LAW OFFICES OF HEIST, WEISSE & WOLK, PLLC

“Serving the Property Management Professional”

 www.evict.com      www.evicttv.com      www.evictforms.com      info@evict.com

EVICTION AVOIDANCE TECHNIQUES
09-03-2025
EVICTION
09-03-2025

For over 20 years now, we have been able to observe the habits and traits of property managers. Some of these habits and traits are good, and some are just plain bad. One interesting aspect has stood out above the rest and is readily apparent in our firm, since we file so many evictions for so many property managers. Some property managers seem to be able to decrease the number of evictions they have when they begin managing a particular property or portfolio of properties. How do they do it? This article will examine some of the habits or procedures of property managers who seem to have found the trick to reducing evictions. Reducing evictions is crucial to the bottom line. Not only are you avoiding the costs of an eviction, the headaches, the uncertainty and all that goes with evicting, you are also minimizing damage to the property. Residents who are evicted generally do not clean the unit upon move out, and worse yet, many maliciously damage or destroy the premises and take off with the appliances, resulting in thousands of dollars in expenses.

 

Communication is the Key

 

Many residents are already preparing to move from the premises, so when you file the eviction, it is actually a waste of money. Often the resident vacates immediately upon getting served with eviction papers. Is this because they got the papers? Often the answer is no; they were planning on moving anyway, but you did not know it. The result is that you wasted the money. Some residents need to be reminded to pay the rent. Funny how the resident all of a sudden pays right after you spoke with them. Some residents are simply late payers and pay on their own schedule. You file an eviction, and they come running into your office, but are now unable to get caught up because of the attorney’s fees and costs you incurred.

 

  1. Notice serving: A Three Day Notice or any other notice for that matter, unless the statute or your lease requires otherwise, should never be served by posting (taping) on the door unless the resident is not home. You are allowed by law to post a Three Day Notice “in the absence of the resident”. Common practice by many property managers is to “tiptoe, tape and take off”. The manager puts the tape on the notice ahead of time, creeps up to the door and lightly places the notice on the door, and then gets out of there before the residents’ unauthorized dog begins to bark. Why? Because the property manager does not want to confront the resident. The result is that the resident will look at the notice, throw it in the trash and maybe pay the rent or not. No communication has occurred, except for the property manager serving the notice, and even that service was legally improper because the manager failed to knock on the door. Knock on that door! If you feel uncomfortable doing it, have someone come with you, or delegate it to someone else.

 

  1. Face to face communication: Speaking with the resident face to face is the best way to communicate and see what the resident’s intentions are. When serving the Three Day Notice or at any time thereafter, the manager should knock and try to engage the resident in conversation. The manager may find out information from the resident at that time which could avoid an eviction:

 

  1. The resident may pay the rent. This is the best and desired result.

 

  1. The resident may tell you they are going to pay tomorrow or give you a fixed date which may be soon after the expiration of the Three Day Notice.

 

This will then affect your decision whether to hold off a couple days or go straight to eviction after the expiration of the Three Day Notice.

 

c. The resident may indicate he is moving. You look in; see a bunch of boxes and over the weekend the resident moves out. By making the decision to hold off, you have averted an eviction and saved some time and money.

 

  1. Past Due Amount Workout Agreement: Upon being able to make the face to face communication happen, the resident may indicate that they do not have all the rent due but can pay you at a future date. Not wanting to lose the resident, you may decide to agree to the payment on a fixed date or date and in a particular fashion. It is a payment plan. By using the Past Due Amount Workout Agreement, this memorializes the agreement and prevents a situation in which the resident claims you gave a verbal extension.

 

  1. The Agreement to Vacate: The resident may ask for a few more days and the property manager, hoping the resident will live by his word agrees. If the property manager agrees, the resident can sign an Agreement to Vacate giving a fixed vacating date. We have found that most residents who sign an Agreement to Vacate will indeed do as they say. Another eviction not filed!

 

  1. Phone or email communications: The next best thing to face to face communication is to speak to the resident on the phone or email them. Generally regular mail is not the preferred method, as mail can take up to 5 days, and each day without rent is lost money. The problem is that many managers fail to have the up to date information necessary to contact the resident and find out his or her intentions. We highly recommend you read this article as soon as possible Importance of Updated Contact Information

 

  1. The 24 Hour Notice: Many property managers give a final “24 hour Notice” to the resident after the Three day Notice has expired. This notice tells that that they have one last chance to pay the rent before their file is sent to the attorney for eviction. Payment demand notices that are given to the resident after the Three Day Notice can compromise the eviction, but that said, use your own judgment as to whether or not you are going to do this. While some judges have ruled that such a notice invalidates the prior Three Day Notice, it can be very effective! We cannot tell you to do this, but we know it is done all the time. If you do decide to send a final notice or 24 hour notice, if a dollar amount is referenced on the reminder notice, it should not conflict with the amount cited on the prior Three Day Notice.

 

LAW OFFICES OF HEIST, WEISSE & WOLK, PLLC

“Serving the Property Management Professional”

www.evict.com    www.evicttv.com     www.evictforms.com    info@evict.com

EVICTING FOR UNAUTHORIZED PETS
09-03-2025
EVICTION
09-03-2025

To evict a tenant for failure to remove an unauthorized pet or pets, you first need to have served a proper Seven Day Notice of Non Compliance with Opportunity to Cure.

 

In order to serve a Seven Day Notice to Terminate, you must be absolutely certain that you can prove to a judge that the tenant has not removed the unauthorized pet AND that the pet was not “authorized” by you or prior management’s failure to act quickly. If the pet has been on the premises for some time with your knowledge or the knowledge of maintenance personnel, employees or prior management and/or you have accepted rent with this knowledge, you will not be successful evicting as you have “authorized” the pet by failing to act. This is due to the legal principle of Waiver and Estoppel.

 

SOME PROOF THAT IS NECESSARY PRIOR TO TERMINATING THE TENANT FOR FAILURE TO REMOVE AN UNAUTHORIZED PET

 

1. Photos of pet AFTER the Seven Day Notice of Noncompliance with Opportunity to Cure has expired.

 

2. Verbal or written admission by the tenant(s) that they have an unauthorized pet.

 

3. Employees of the apartment community or pest control who will testify in court that they saw the pet AFTER the Seven Day Notice of Noncompliance with opportunity to cure expired.

 

4. Dates and time the pet was seen on the premises AFTER the Seven Day Notice of Noncompliance with opportunity to cure expired.

 

5. Tape recording and/or video recording of the pet and the pet barking, if a dog pet AFTER the Seven Day Notice of Noncompliance with opportunity to cure expired.

 

6. Photos of pet bowls, litter pan and pet taken AFTER the Seven Day Notice of Noncompliance with Opportunity to Cure has expired.

 

IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A STRONG CASE AND THE TENANT HAS A DEFENSE. YOU WILL LOSE. EXPECT THE TENANT TO DENY THAT THE PET IS LIVING ON THE PREMISES.

 

REMEMBER THE JUDGE WILL NEED TO BE CONVINCED THAT THE PET LIVES THERE AND DID NOT JUST VISIT.

 

LAW OFFICES OF HEIST, WEISSE & WOLK, PLLC

“Serving the Property Management Professional”

www.evict.com     www.evicttv.com     www.evictforms.com    info@evict.com

EVICTING FOR UNAUTHORIZED OCCUPANTS
09-03-2025
EVICTION
09-03-2025

You see the unauthorized person there every morning. You see their car parked there every night. The unauthorized person even comes into your office complaining about something. Can you force them out? Can you prove your case? It is harder than you think.

To evict a resident for having an unauthorized occupant, you first need to have served a proper Seven Day Notice of Non Compliance with Opportunity to Cure. In order to serve a Seven Day Notice to Terminate, you must be absolutely certain that you can prove to a judge that the resident has an unauthorized occupant residing on the premises, not just visiting, and that the occupant was not “authorized” by you, the manager or prior management’s failure to act quickly. If the occupant has been on the premises for some time with your knowledge or the knowledge of maintenance personnel, employees or prior management, and/or you have accepted rent with this knowledge, you will not be successful evicting, as you have “authorized” the occupant by failing to act. This is due to the legal principles of waiver and estoppel.

SOME PROOF THAT IS NECESSARY PRIOR TO TERMINATING THE RESIDENT FOR FAILURE TO REMOVE AN UNAUTHORIZED OCCUPANT:

  1. Photos of unauthorized occupant AFTER the Seven Day Notice of Noncompliance with Opportunity to Cure has expired.

 

  1. 24 hour Video surveillance tapes or written admission by the resident(s) that they have an unauthorized occupant AFTER the Seven Day Notice of Noncompliance with Opportunity to Cure has expired.

 

  1. Employees of the apartment community who will testify in court that they know for a fact the unauthorized occupant is still living on the premises AFTER the Seven Day Notice of Noncompliance with opportunity to cure expired and are prepared to show the judge proof.

 

  1. Dates and time the unauthorized occupant was seen on the premises AFTER the Seven Day Notice of Noncompliance with opportunity to cure expired.

 

  1. 24 hour Video surveillance of the unauthorized occupant’s vehicle AFTER the Seven Day Notice of Noncompliance with Opportunity to Cure expired.

 

  1. Police report where the unauthorized occupant gives your address as his or her address AFTER the Seven Day Notice of Noncompliance with Opportunity to Cure has expired.

 

IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A STRONG CASE, YOU WILL LOSE. EXPECT THE RESIDENT TO DENY THAT THE PERSON IS LIVING ON THE PREMISES. REMEMBER THE JUDGE WILL NEED TO BE CONVINCED THAT THE PERSON LIVES THERE AND IS NOT JUST VISITING.

 

LAW OFFICES OF HEIST, WEISSE & WOLK, PLLC

“Serving the Property Management Professional”

www.evict.com     www.evicttv.com     www.evictforms.com    info@evict.com

EVICTING FOR NOISE AND DISTURBANCES
09-03-2025
EVICTION
09-03-2025

Often our office is asked to evict a tenant or tenants due to noise, partying, or other disturbances. These are all grounds for eviction if the tenant has been given a proper Seven Day Notice of Noncompliance with Opportunity to Cure and the noncompliance continues and you can prove this in a court of law.  Proof is where the problem lies.

 

In order to serve a Seven Day of Noncompliance Notice of Termination, you need to have hard core solid proof that you will be able to submit into court to completely and without a doubt prove to the judge that the tenant is engaged in actions which are seriously bad.  Most property managers do not have this solid proof and feel that a lot of small occurrences add up to being able to evict. They do not.  We need a serious noncompliance or noncompliances to be successful and we need proof. If we are not provided with this, we will not file the eviction case as it puts the owner and management company at a serious liability for losing the case and for having to pay the tenant’s attorneys fees which often average $3000.00.  Losing a Noncompliance case can also result in a Federal Discrimination case against the owner if the tenant is of a protected class. Frequently we are asked to evict tenants who live in condos for alleged violations of the lease or Florida law. MORE OFTEN THAN NOT, the condo residents or association have little or no proof but are raising a big stink about the tenant. These are our toughest cases. No proof, and we will not file the case.

The main proof we need to prevail in a Noncompliance case is a serious occurrence or occurrences which took place SINCE YOU LAST ACCEPTED RENT. If a tenant does something seriously wrong and you accept rent, THE TENANT IS FORGIVEN in the eyes of the law.

PROOF WE NEED TO PREVAIL IN A NOISE OR DISTURBANCE TYPE CASE

Police reports

Police who will appear in court

Courtesy officer reports

Multiple neighbor witnesses

Multiple neighbors who will appear in court

Property management witnesses

Property management witnesses who will appear in court

Multiple noncompliances

Serious noncompliances

Arrest for noise

Citations for noise

Dates and times of each occurrence

Photos proving parties

Audio tapes of noise

All other proof to convince the judge

NOTE: WRITTEN STATEMENTS BY POLICE OR NEIGHBORS ARE NOT ADMISSIBLE IN COURT. THIS IS INADMISSIBLE HEARSAY. THE PERSON WHO WROTE THE STATEMENT MUST APPEAR IN COURT.

LAW OFFICES OF HEIST, WEISSE & WOLK, PLLC

“Serving the Property Management Professional”

www.evict.com     www.evicttv.com     www.evictforms.com    info@evict.com

EVICTING FOR HOUSEKEEPING ISSUES
09-03-2025
EVICTION
09-03-2025

To evict a resident for housekeeping issues, the condition of the unit must be BAD. That means it must be MORE THAN messy, full of stuff, or cluttered. A sink full of dirty dishes does not constitute a violation that rises to the level of a noncompliance with the lease or Florida law.

 

To terminate a tenancy for poor housekeeping issues, you first need to serve a proper Seven Day Notice of Non Compliance with Opportunity to Cure. A Seven Day Notice to Terminate might follow if you are able to prove that the housekeeping issues listed on the cure notice were not rectified and that the housekeeping is indeed a serious problem that affects the health and safety of others, or that it is damaging the property.

SOME PROOF THAT IS NECESSARY PRIOR TO TERMINATING THE RESIDENT FOR HOUSEKEEPING REASONS:

  1. Photos or video of the condition of the unit. The photos or video should show the condition of the place as of the time the cure notice was served AND as of the time the termination notice was served.

 

  1. Employees or other residents (witnesses) of the apartment community who will testify in court about how they are affected by the poor housekeeping. Perhaps a neighbor has been infested with roaches from the resident’s apartment. Or, the noxious fumes from the pet waste are bothering a neighbor.

 

  1. If available, a copy of an inspection report from code enforcement or Section 8. If the agencies have not done an inspection, do not request one.

Common Problems That Arise in These Cases Include:

  1. The resident got the cure notice and cured some, but not all, of the problems. This means it may be best to serve another cure notice for the problems that persisted.

 

  1. The place is a mess, but it is not a lease violation. A manager’s perception of what is sanitary and what is not may be very different than what is a genuine lease violation.

 

  1. The manager is using “poor housekeeping” as a reason for eviction where the real problem is something else. If the housekeeping issue is a pre-text for some other motivation, the case will surely lose.

 

  1. The resident has a disability that affects the person’s ability to maintain the apartment. In this situation, you may need to make a reasonable accommodation for the resident. One reasonable accommodation (there may be others) is to permit more than the seven days to cure the noncompliance.

 

If you request a notice from your attorney, be sure to include lots of detail about the condition of the apartment. It is NOT sufficient to merely allege “poor housekeeping” or “place is dirty”. Give us the low-down, dirty (pun intended) details so your attorney can draft a notice that paints a picture for a judge. The more detail, the better.

 

LAW OFFICES OF HEIST, WEISSE & WOLK, PLLC

“Serving the Property Management Professional”

www.evict.com    www.evicttv.com    www.evictforms.com    info@evict.com

COURT REQUIRED WHEN NO MONEY IN THE COURT REGISTRY
09-03-2025
EVICTION
09-03-2025

In order for a resident to have his or her day in court, the resident must place the rent money that is owed into the Court Registry, right? You would think so, because it is the law. Unfortunately, many judges do not follow the law and set eviction trials when no money at all is deposited in the Court Registry or fail to require accruing rent to be deposited into the court registry. The result? More time wasted and more money lost. How does this happen?

Law regarding Court Registry Deposits

Florida Statutes clearly state that if a resident is contesting an eviction, the resident must place the rent money as alleged in the eviction complaint and money as it becomes due during the time period from when the case is filed into the Court Registry until a final hearing, or file a Motion to Determine Rent, which will often allow the resident to get into court without placing any money into the Court Registry. This article will only deal with the resident filing an answer with the court, not the Motion to Determine rent, which is dealt with in the article entitled Motion to Stay Writ . If the resident claims that he or she has PAID the rent to you in full, or has paid you rent after you after you served the Three Day Notice, most judges will set the case for a hearing. Payment of rent is a complete defense to an eviction, and a judge will not take any chances or require the resident put up more money into the court registry other than money which may become due as the case progresses into the next month. While it is not too common that a resident will outright lie and say they have paid the rent, this resident delay tactic will be dealt with in a future article.

Florida Statutes section 83.60 Defenses to action for rent or possession (2) In an action by the manager for possession of a dwelling unit, if the resident interposes any defense other than payment, the resident shall pay into the registry of the court the accrued rent as alleged in the complaint or as determined by the court and the rent which accrues during the pendency of the proceeding, when due. The clerk shall notify the resident of such requirement in the summons. Failure of the resident to pay the rent into the registry of the court or to file a motion to determine the amount of rent to be paid into the registry within 5 days, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, after the date of service of process constitutes an absolute waiver of the resident's defenses other than payment, and the manager is entitled to an immediate default judgment for removal of the resident with a writ of possession to issue without further notice or hearing thereon…

Purpose of the Law

The purpose behind the law is to protect the manager from a potential greater loss of rent by the resident filing an answer to the complaint, delaying the action while the rent owed continues to build up. It also is meant to cut down on unnecessary court hearings in which the resident has no real defenses to the law. Basically the law says to the resident, “PUT YOUR MONEY WHERE YOUR MOUTH IS or you will not be entitled to a hearing.” There is no surprise here to the resident, as this requirement is clearly stated in the eviction summons as required by the law. A number of years ago, this statute only stated that the manager was entitled to a “default” if the resident failed to place the rent money into the court registry. This gave an easy “out” for judges, and many would enter a default but still set the case for a hearing or eviction trial, allowing for a further delay and loss of rent to the manager. The statute was modified and now states that the manager is entitled to an “immediate default judgment”, which made it clear that if the money was not in the Court Registry, a final judgment of eviction would be entered against the resident and a writ of possession could issue.

Suppose the Resident Files an Answer and Places the Rent into the Court Registry?

1. ALL RENT DEPOSITED - Under current law, if the resident places ALL the rent into the court registry as it is alleged due in the complaint that your attorney files, the resident has an absolute right to be heard in court, at which time the resident can bring forth any and all defenses to the eviction action. This is assuming that no more rent has accumulated during the eviction action, i.e., we have not gone into another month and more rent is owed.

2. PARTIAL RENT DEPOSITED - If the resident only places a partial amount into the court registry, not the full amount, some judges will set the case for a hearing. For instance, the complaint when filed states that $600.00 is owed, but the resident only places half this much into the Court Registry. The law states that the judge should enter a default judgment against the resident. Unfortunately the partial rent deposit can trigger a court hearing even though it DOES NOT comply with the law.

3. ALL RENT DEPOSITED BUT NOW MORE RENT IS OWED - An eviction is commonly filed sometime in the middle or towards the end of the month. Often the resident will place the amount of money owed as alleged in the complaint into the Court Registry, but NOW another month is owed. Under the law, the judge should enter a default judgment against the resident, but often this does not happen, and again a hearing is set.

The Law Versus Reality

As you can see, the law says one thing, but in reality often another thing occurs. How can this happen? Some judges are not aware of the law. This can occur when a judge is new and has just been put on the bench, or another judge who does not handle evictions may be sitting in for a judge on vacation or home ill. Other judges simply are more lenient to the resident and have taken a stance that they will do what they will. A judge new to the bench is often lenient in the beginning, then as times goes on, they realize why the law was written and how the failure to follow the law results in unnecessary hearings, a burden on the court and a greater loss of rent to the manager.

Your Attorney’s Role

When a resident files an answer with the court and has not complied with the law requiring the deposit of the rent money into the Court Registry, your attorney will file a Motion for Default for Failure to Post Rent Into the Court Registry. Our firm files detailed motions in these cases, and we never fail to remind the judge what the law is in the matter. If the eviction rolls into another month and the accrued rent is not deposited as required by law, we file another Motion for Default for Failure to Post Rent Into the Court Registry to again show the judge what the law is, in hopes that he or she will sign the judgment. Will the judge sign the default judgment after receiving the motion? Yes, in most cases. In the other cases, the judge will require a hearing, and unfortunately you will end up in court. Your attorney will often know the particular judge’s stance in these cases and may be able to advise you whether there will be a high chance of a hearing, or whether the judge will most likely sign the judgment.

The Manager’s Role

There is not much the manager can do when the judge requires a hearing, but there are some things that increase the risk of the judge setting a hearing when a resident files an answer. A Three Day Notice with odd amounts will often raise the suspicion of a judge that something may be improper on the Three Day Notice. Strange amounts can be due to late charges, acceptance of partial payments in the past, a running balance, accumulated late charges, excessive rent owed or many other reasons. If the Three Day Notice clearly states how you arrived at the amount you are demanding, this makes a judge more comfortable in entering a default if no money has been placed in the Court Registry. Many managers who file their own evictions do not know that only rent or amounts defined as rent in the lease can be placed on a Three Day Notice. Judges see improper Three Day Notices all day long. Take your time, prepare your Three Day Notice with care, and always ask your attorney what can or cannot be put on the Three Day Notice.

 

LAW OFFICES OF HEIST, WEISSE & WOLK, PLLC

“Serving the Property Management Professional”

www.evict.com      www.evicttv.com      www.evictforms.com      info@evict.com

COURT ETIQUETTE AND PROCEDURES
09-03-2025
EVICTION
09-03-2025

Most property managers and management will at some time in their career end up in court. Despite the best efforts to settle cases, sometimes court is inevitable and unavoidable. The case may be a simple three minute Motion to Dismiss or a complicated and convoluted eviction with a counterclaim and many witnesses. In some cases the judge will take complete control of the proceedings from the start and simply start asking questions. Some judges closely follow the rules of civil procedure, and court is conducted in a very formal fashion. Some judges do not even hold open court and prefer to deal with the cases in their chambers where the parties all sit around a large conference table. In all cases, the judge is in charge and must be afforded absolute respect. Even if the judge seems relaxed, joking and casual, the parties should remember that the judge will be making a decision, and all court is a serious matter. Sometime court is like what you may see on the daytime court shows, but most of the time, it is NOT like Judge Judy or the People’s Court. Someone may leave that courtroom very unhappy.

 

Who Must Go To Court

 

The parties and witnesses who should or must come to court will depend upon the type of case. In an eviction action for nonpayment of rent, the person who is most familiar with the rent records and receipts will need to be in court. This is usually just the property manager or the management, but it can get far more complicated if the resident brings up a defense that he did not receive a Three Day Notice, or that he had made an agreement with your leasing agent, assistant or someone else employed by your company. If other people are involved or had contact with the resident, bring them to court. You can never have too many witnesses with you in court, but failing to bring a necessary witness can doom a case. In a security deposit dispute case, you may have to being in vendors, experts, people who did the work on a unit and all your physical evidence and documentation. Your attorney will tell you who must come to court, what you need, and witnesses may be subpoenaed to try to make sure they actually come to court.

 

Arriving To Court

 

We strongly urge you to carefully map out the courthouse and get good directions if you are not familiar with the court location. Many counties have built new or additional courthouses, and it is quite possible that you are assuming you are going to the same courthouse that was there 5 years ago when you last had court. Once you get directions, ARRIVE EARLY. We almost always arrive 30 minutes before court. Many courthouses have severe parking problems and tight security which could result in you being late. Some small courthouses have one x-ray machine and metal detector; others have high tech systems that surpass airport security. You don’t want to accidentally go to the wrong courthouse that is a 35 minute drive from the correct one.

 

What To Bring and NOT To Bring

 

Your attorney will tell you exactly what to bring to court. Most likely it will be the resident’s actual file if it is a nonpayment of rent case and copies of the lease and notices. You should organize the file so you can easily take out original documents in the event the judge wants to see something in your file, or if there is a dispute about the authenticity of a copy. There are certain things you should leave at home. Knives, guns, mace, pepper spray and other prohibited items have been brought to court by our clients. They were in a pocket book (or sock) and forgotten. Clear out anything from your pockets, purse or pocketbook before you leave for court and imagine you will be going through an airport screening checkpoint. Leave your switchblade and 9MM at home.

What to Wear

 

Don’t wear shorts! Even if shorts are part of your work uniform, they should NEVER be worn in court. Females can sometimes get away with it, but why take a chance? Some judges are so strict about this that the bailiff, a sheriff’s deputy, will make you leave the courtroom if you dare to wear shorts. Dress respectfully. A jacket and tie is not necessary unless you are the attorney, but a well-dressed client is nice to have by our side.

 

Preparation

 

Many of our clients expect that we will testify for them and do all the talking. While that would be nice and easy, and we try to keep you from having to say too much, our client usually must testify. You will need to know the date you gave the Three Day Notice, how it was delivered, who served it, how much rent was on the Three Day Notice, what the amount on the Three Day Notice represents, when the lease was entered into, when it expires or expired, when you last accepted rent, how much is the total amount owed and just about any other fact regarding the case. If you come across as confused or uncertain, the judge may get angry FAST. You need to prepare before court. Your attorney can be 100% prepared, but if you don’t know the facts of your case, the judge may be unsympathetic or even angry at you. Don’t give the judge an excuse to let the resident win a case or continue or delay the case to a later date. Your attorney will most likely have a sheet with all the information on it in one place. You should do this as well and create your own “cheat sheet” you can look at rather than fumbling through the file. No matter how organized you are, when the judge starts talking, everyone will get nervous, and the most organized person might instantly become disorganized.

 

Addressing the Court

One of the first things that will happen at the start of the case will be for the judge to ask all parties who will testify to raise their right hand and “swear to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth”. Raise your right hand and clearly say “I will” or whatever the judge asks you to say. There is no need to shout this, but failure to say it loud enough for the judge to hear will sometimes anger the judge. You and any witnesses who might testify need to do this, even if you are not sure you will be called as a witness. The judge will often not know whether you are the resident or the manager, so when asked your name, clearly state “Mary Smith – manager of Mountain View Apartments”. Whenever you speak to the judge, refer to him or her as “your honor”: “Yes, your honor”, “No, your honor”, “I do not know, your honor”. Practice this a bit before you go to court.

 

Behavior During the Proceeding

 

Speak only when you are asked to speak. Even if the resident says something completely bizarre or tells an outright lie, you must stay quiet, not roll your eyes, laugh, shake your head or act out in any way. There is a strong tendency to want to respond when someone is lying about you or saying something utterly outrageous. Don’t do it. You or your attorney will address the issue. While the resident may be lying, never call the resident a liar. Your attorney will do that for you in the “attorney sort of way”.

 

Cell Phones

 

Do you want your phone confiscated by the bailiff or really annoy the judge? Then leave your phone on. Despite verbal requests and signs in the courtroom to put the phones on “vibrate” or “silent”, they end up going off and disturbing the judge. We ask that you turn your phones or Blackberry off completely. You can survive an hour without it. Turn it off and hope the resident forgets to turn his or hers off.

 

Testifying

 

The judge may go straight to you and ask you questions or allow the attorney to proceed in a more formal manner with an opening statement. You never know for sure, but usually your attorney will know how a judge generally will proceed and will prepare you accordingly. After your attorney gives an opening statement, you will usually be the first witness, and your attorney will ask you things like your name, where you are employed and if you are familiar with the rent records and receipts. Short and clear answers are all you need to give. Let your attorney direct the questioning. Speak loudly enough so the judge can hear you. Never annoy the judge.

 

Cross-Examination

 

Just as your attorney can take testimony from the resident and cross-examine the resident, the resident can cross-examine you. The resident may question you on something you said in response to your attorney’s question to you. This is where a hearing or trial can get completely out of control. This is not time for a conversation or argument with the resident. Just answer the resident’s questions, and if the question is improper, you can pause and your attorney will object. The judge will then direct you to either answer or ignore the question.

 

Post-Ruling Behavior

 

If you win the case, which is frequently the case in eviction actions, do not smile and thank the judge. Just put away your papers and follow your attorney out the door. The resident may be angry and make a scene; ignore it all. Your attorney will simply say, “Thank you for your time, your honor” and walk out the door. The judge is not “happy” the resident is being evicted, although you may be, and the judge does not need you to thank him or her for evicting the resident. Try to allow the resident to walk ahead of you, so you do not end up in the elevator with the resident you just evicted, or end up in an altercation outside of the courtroom. If the Judge gives an adverse ruling, do not argue with the Judge or in any way show disdain for the ruling.

 

Failing to Show Up For Court

 

As hard as this may be to believe, sometimes our clients decide not to show up for court. Something comes up at the last minute or for some reason our client decides it is not necessary to come to court. A lesser issue is when our client decides to send someone else in his or her place that has little to no knowledge about the case. Is this fatal? It sure can be. We often are able to use the resident’s testimony to win the case, but if the resident‘s testimony is adverse on a key factual issue, there is often no way for the attorney to refute the resident’s distortions or lies. If you have a real emergency, call your attorney immediately, and often the case can be re-set. Always take court seriously. A judge can dismiss a case or worse yet; find for the resident if you do not show up. If the resident has an attorney, you may and most likely will be liable for the resident’s attorney’s fees if you lose.

 

Communication

It is always advisable for the attorney to have your cell number and for you to have your attorney’s cell number in case there is some reason you will be late to court. Communication is the key, and the judge will usually be willing to hold the case off or take other cases before you in the event you are having a problem getting to the courthouse.

LAW OFFICES OF HEIST, WEISSE & WOLK, PLLC

“Serving the Property Management Professional”

www.evict.com      www.evicttv.com      www.evictforms.com      info@evict.com

ABANDONMENT OF UNIT
09-03-2025
ABANDONMENT
09-03-2025
 
The electric is off, the water is off, the unit is filthy and filled with trash, empty beer cans, some clothes, piled up unclaimed mail, and the neighbor tells you that they saw the resident pack up and leave last week. Is the unit abandoned? Can you take possession of the unit and get it ready for the new resident? Not if you want to follow the law and protect yourself from liability! 
 
The 3 ways you get possession 
 
The 3 ways to legally gain possession of a rental unit are surrender, eviction or abandonment. When it comes to determining whether a unit is abandoned, we have to ignore logic, common sense and intuition and look solely to the law. FS 83.59 states: 
 
“When the resident has abandoned the dwelling unit. In the absence of actual knowledge of abandonment, it shall be presumed that the resident has abandoned the dwelling unit if he is absent from the premises for a period of time and equal to one-half the time for periodic rental payments. However, this presumption shall not apply if the rent is current or the resident has notified the manager, in writing, of an intended absence”
 
Basically this means that the appearance of the unit, the fact that the electric was off or a neighbor’s observations are all irrelevant. We just have to ask some simple questions:  
1. Were the residents (all residents!) absent for 15 days? 
2. Is the rent unpaid?
3. Did the residents tell us in writing that they were coming back?
These are the legal requirements of abandonment. Failure to follow this can result in costly lawsuits in which the judge will be sympathetic to the resident because you failed to follow the law. The burden of proof imposed on the wronged resident is extremely low, and the resident can easily fabricate the alleged missing contents of the unit, resulting in a large judgment and liability to pay the resident’s attorney’s fees, which could be substantial. When a property manager “jumps the gun” and takes possession too soon, many attorneys will readily take a case like this on a contingency fee basis, making it easy for the resident to have access to the legal system. The resident can sue for the lock out prohibited practices and of course the claimed value of the items he or she claims are missing. The property manager could face other serious consequences in court, including criminal charges, charges of wrongful eviction, conversion, and liability for anything the resident claimed was in the unit!! 
In some cases, the property manager has knowledge that the resident is gone, but someone else is living in the unit. Is this person a squatter or trespasser? You would think so, but if this person states that he is in there with the permission of the resident or is renting from the resident, it does not matter whether the original resident is gone. The unit is simply NOT abandoned. Some property managers attempt to call the police when an unknown person is remaining in the unit, but usually the police will state to the property manager that it is a “civil matter” and tell you that you must evict the person. Calling the police is always worth a try, because the person in the unit may in fact be a trespasser or squatter completely unknown to the original resident and if so will often readily leave. 
In the event you accidentally take possession too soon and the resident returns, try to calm the resident, call your attorney immediately, and get the resident to write down what he or she says is missing and the approximate value. If you have only changed the locks and have not removed any belongings, you will need to let the resident back in, regardless of how much money, if any, the resident owes you. After this you can proceed with the normal route of eviction after proper notice, or possibly the resident will surrender the premises. Remember that A UNIT IS LEGALLY ABANDONED UNDER FLORIDA LAW IF ALL OF THE FOLLOWING IS IN PLACE: 
1. NO ONE HAS BEEN IN THE RENTAL UNIT FOR A FULL 15 DAYS AND YOU CAN PROVE IT.
 
2. THE RENT IS UNPAID.
 
LAW OFFICES OF HEIST, WEISSE & WOLK, PLLC
“Serving the Property Management Professional”
 www.evict.com      www.evicttv.com      www.evictforms.com      info@evict.com


  • STORM
  • SALE
  • PETS
  • RENT
  • LEASE
  • EVICTIONS
  • LIABILITY
  • LEAD
  • ABANDONMENT
  • DEATH
  • DEPOSIT
  • EVICTION
  • APPLICATION
  • BANKRUPTCY
  • ATTORNEYS FEES
  • ADVANCE RENT
  • DEPOSITS
  • RENTAL FURNITURE
  • FLOOD
  • FIRE
  • LIABILITY AVOIDANCE
  • CARPET
  • NONCOMPLIANCE
  • ACCESS
  • PET DEPOSIT
  • EARLY TERMINATION
  • CORPORATE TENANTS
  • SATELLITE DISHES
  • RENEWING A LEASE
  • REMOVING A TENANT FROM A LEASE
  • REFERRAL FEES
  • LEASE BREAK
  • CORPORATE TENANT
  • APPLICATION AND SCREENING
  • LAWSUIT
  • LEASE SIGNING
  • NOTICE SERVING
  • REPAIRS
  • NONCURABLE NONCOMPLIANCE
  • TENANT PAINTING
  • LEASE BREAKS
  • TENANT DEATH
  • ATTICS
  • UNAUTHORIZED OCCUPANTS
  • TAX LIENS
  • SUBLETTING
  • SQUATTERS
  • LEASE SIGNING AND POA
  • SHOWINGS
  • CREDIT REPORT
  • NONRENEWAL
  • ESA AND SERVICE ANIMALS
  • SECURITY DEPOSIT REFUNDING
  • SCREENS AND WINDOWS
  • RENT ABATEMENT
  • RENEWAL CONFIRMATION
  • REMOVING A TENANT
  • PROCESS SERVER
  • PRESSURE WASHING
  • PREPAID - ADVANCE RENT
  • PRE AND POST CLOSING OCCUPANCY
  • PERSONAL PROPERTY
  • DEPOSIT FUNDS
  • NSF CHECKS
  • MOLD
  • NOTICES
  • INSURANCE
  • HVAC
  • HOT TUB
  • HOMESTEAD
  • SECURITY DEPOSITS
  • FIREPLACE
  • SAFETY
  • DOG BITES
  • DISCLOSURE
  • NONCOMPLIANCES
  • CORPORATIONS
  • LATE RENT
  • CARBON MONOXIDE
  • ASSOCIATIONS
  • AIR CONDITIONING
  • POOLS
  • RELEASES
  • FICTITIOUS NAMES
  • SUING AND COLLECTIONS
  • COLLECTIONS AND SUING
  • YOUR TENANT SERVED YOU WITH A 7 DAY NOTICE - WHAT DOES THE TENANT WANT?
  • WHAT DOES THE TENANT WANT?
  • VERBAL AGREEMENTS
  • TERMINATING DUE TO A MAJOR REPAIR NEED
  • TERMINATING DUE TO MOLD