ANSWERS: 6
  • 30 days. once you have been served with a writ of eviction, you have 30 days to vacate the premises. this includes you and all your personal property. After the 30th day, if you are still on the premises, the sheriff dept. will enter your dwelling and move your property out of the dwelling and into the public street. It's the civil law, in tennessee.
  • I believe it depends on the written contract that you enter into when the lease or renting begins. If you have a written contract, you will stay within the terms of that contact. That is to say, if it says 30 days, then it's 30 days. if it says 10, then it's 10. However, if there is no contract, the renter is considered to be a month to month renter and there is no law that I know of that says that you have to give any notice. Therefore if no contract, you don't have to give any notice. You may want to check with your state by state laws on this subject before taking this at my word but i believe this to be true.
  • If you are renting on a month-to-month basis, you may cancel the lease by giving the tenant 30 days' notice. The 30 days begins to run after the rent is due for the next month after the tenant receives the notice. For instance, suppose that rent is due on the first of the month, and you give the tenant notice to leave on March 10. The next rent payment is due on April 1, so the 30 days' notice begins to run on April 1; and the tenant does not have to leave until May 1.
  • Can landlord evict a tenant without serving them leagl notice thru the state of Tennesse.
  • Here is a link you can go to, that will let you review the full Tennessee Law on Eviction of renters. All the answers I have seen after reading them look correct except one and someone else corrected them. A renter can give a 14-15 day notice if the payment is deliqent or you are a threat to the property or others on the property. Otherwise, it's 30 days. But I'll let you read for yourself. tennessee.gov/sos/acts/101/pub/pc451.pdf
  • There is a lot of false (or misleading) info being spread. The answer depends on why you are being evicted. If a tenant is a danger to others, you can evict with three days notice. In almost all other instances (in Tennessee, but not other states) you must give 30 days notice to correct or vacate. If the tenant violates the lease a second time within six months, the landlord may then evict with 14 days notice. Do you have to get a court order before providing a notice of eviction? NO. However, you cannot forcibly evict without a court order. Court exists to resolve legal disputes. If your landlord is evicting you, and you think that your landlord is legally wrong, then your remedy is to ignore the eviction and let the landlord take you to court. But note: you CANNOT file a lawsuit for possession until AFTER you have getting notice to evict and the tenant does not leave..

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