With my pending seperation/retirement I am looking for a way to get my rental property back. I signed a lease with my tenant in March and have no clue how to get my house back because I need it for my family. Has anyone had any experience with this? And if so, please share your thoughts on the subject.
Indeed, it's never a dull moment as a rental property owner in my opinion!
Hmm, at least you don't have to deal with "dead beat" tenants who are aware of the tenant laws and use them to their fullest opportunity to remain in your property rent free until official eviction by the U.S. Circuit Court legal system!
Case-in-point as follows:
We own a rental property formerly a newly built home in NC and since we moved out over five years ago, the property was placed under the services of a good rental property management company which was a very wise decision.
The first "dead beat" tenants stop paying the agreed upon monthly rent after two months. It took four months to officially evict them via the U.S. Circuit Court which yielded six months of rent-free living for them, but over $3,000.00 in property damage! We were not able to locate them so the $3,000.00+ in property damage was never recovered from them. We reinvested the minimum amount of funding in order to get the rental property back to a rentable condition. Note that the rental property was only less than 1.5 years old at this point in time!
The second "dead beat" tenants made the agreed upon monthy rent often late but late fees were accessed. Upon an inspection of our rental property by the request of the rental property management company's maintenance supervisor, the rental property was not being properly maintained. The tenants were allowing their children to draw on all of the walls within the house except the one room above the garage which was used for storage. The carpet throughout was torn, had holes and was extremely dirty except in the room above the garage. Upon the tenant’s request, my wife and I agreed to allow a breach in the tenant's lease contract with exceptions to get them out of the house. The tenants agreed, moved out then tried to "disappear" without paying the agreed upon property damages. Note that the rental property was less than three years old at this point in time!
In short, a nearly $8,000.00 lawsuit was filed with the U.S. Circuit Court for property damage, loss of use/rent, water + electricity expenses, court fees, etc. We won the lawsuit and was awarded the maximum $5,000.00 judgment for a small claims court claim. Now, the challenge was getting the money from the former tenants. Fortunately, the previous tenants were finally located by the local Sheriff's Department, but they currently still owe us less than $300.00 from the court settlement and won't pay. Therefore, back to U.S. Circuit Court we shall go!
With our rental property receiving brand new paint (e.g., water-based for easy washing) in the entire house, brand new carpeting in the entire house and other replacements due to tenant damage, it was only on the rental market for a couple of months.
Again, indeed, it's never a dull moment as a rental property owner in my opinion!
Thus, I quite often comment that "possessing well-informed knowledge is truly a powerful equalizer."
Best Wishes!