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  1. #1

    Default Eviction for Allowing a Banned Person to Live in the Premises

    My question involves restraining orders in the State of: California
    My parents rent an apartment a as well as my sister.I was as former tenant abd ess not evicted. The manager and his sister who is the asst. Because I was a former drug user and both of them as well. But they harass me bad. Saying I can't be here .well 2mo. So the manager called the cops on me because I knocked on my nephew bedroom window because my sister want home abd he had his headphones on abd didn't hear the door he begins yelling blah etc. When the police get there they actually told me about a restraining order that slurred me to visit as much svc often as I want without then harassing me or evicting My family which they are going to my parents because I was in the pool area without them they were coming out she asst.manager who is always rude started yelling at me fir no reason loud she said New I'm.going to start the eviction abd the following Monday they got a 60 notice. This ifs unfair my parents have no money to mice they pay there tent on time they have threatened my sister she won't slew be over there now. I don't live in the property what can I dothey Havre till , middle of July .also they accepted June rent from them is that allowed. I have never been in trouble on the property nothing this had been ongoing harassing since me abd my ex lived here.

  2. #2
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    Default Re: Eviction for Allowing a Banned Person to Live in the Premises

    Given that you appear to have difficulty articulating your thoughts in writing, you should consider having somebody help you compose your posts so that they're understandable to other people.

    If somebody has a restraining order prohibiting you from being on the premises, you are supposed to obey that restraining order.

    If you have been banned from the apartment building due to your past conduct, you are supposed to respect that ban. While there could be narrow exceptions that would apply to a social visit, depending on the full facts (and in the absence of a restraining order), a tenant would put herself at risk of eviction if she knowingly allowed you to move into her unit despite the ban, and may face consequences for allowing you to move into the unit without reporting the additional occupant to the landlord. Your parents will have to review their lease to see what it provides -- but, from the rest of your post, it doesn't sound like any of that would be relevant.

    If your parents were given a 60-day notice, that suggests that they are month-to-month tenants and that their tenancy is being ended. When you rent on a month-to-month basis, that's one of the risks you accept. A landlord does not need special grounds to end a month-to-month tenancy upon proper notice. Yes, your parents owe rent through the end of their tenancy.

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