From a follower:
Hi! I did some research. Yes she was evicted but…
Basically if a tenant is more than 5 days late the landlord can evict them, this seems a bit ridiculous.
I mean yeah – pay your bills on time
But also – if shit happens, it’s a fast turnaround
If you do post this, cover her address.
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B, better known as the Prosecco Princess, is a co-founder of Bravo and Cocktails and co-hosts the Cocktails and Gossip podcast with Amanda. Known for her knack for getting the tea, B and Amanda have built Bravo and Cocktails into one of the go-to destinations for reality TV gossip, celebrity blinds, and all things Bravo. Bravo and Cocktails famously broke the #Scandoval story before it hit mainstream media. When she's not spilling the tea or doing #Momlife things, you can find her covering the latest casting shake-ups, reunion drama, and everything in between across the Bravo universe.
As someone who works in the rental market industry, yes this is true is a tenant is 5 or more days late the landlord can file for eviction. But first landlords must post at minimum a 3 day notice (business days not counting the day of posting) to tenants stating the total amount of back rent that is due.
Then once that date expired and tenants have not reached out to make payment or to make a payment arrangement is when landlords can formally file an eviction notice. Even with that, the court needs to process the request, formally serve the tenant and the tenants have some time to deposit the backed rent into a court fund. The. The landlord can choose to accept the money and let them stay or accept the money and proceed with the eviction through the sheriffs office. That service is dependent on what the landlord chooses and can range from 2-5 days. The whole process not counting a courts backlog can buy tenants anywhere from 1-2 months of living at the property from the day they stopped paying rent.
Not when you make good money from a hit show and obviously spent money on getting a lot of work done.
This posters information does not have complete context.
As someone who works for real estate investors and have dealt with landlord/tenant disputes I can speak to this. Yes, the landlord can choose to evict after the tenant is at least 5 days late for rent but before filing they have to provide a minimum 3 day notice as a second attempt in collecting rent. This is business days and does not include the date of posting.
After that it goes through the courts with tenants being served and still given a chance to pay rent through a court account. Once a judge signs off on the eviction you then have to submit a request to the sheriffs Dept and that depends on how fast you want it to be done. Sometimes all this can take 1-2 months depending on the courts backlog. It’s not so one day to another.
This posters information does not have complete context.
As someone who works for real estate investors and have dealt with landlord/tenant disputes I can speak to this. Yes, the landlord can choose to evict after the tenant is at least 5 days late for rent but before filing they have to provide a minimum 3 day notice as a second attempt in collecting rent. This is business days and does not include the date of posting.
After that it goes through the courts with tenants being served and still given a chance to pay rent through a court account. Once a judge signs off on the eviction you then have to submit a request to the sheriffs Dept and that depends on how fast you want it to be done. Sometimes all this can take 1-2 months depending on the courts backlog. It’s not so one day to another.