Landlord/Tenant, legal issues while tenant is in jail and apartment smells bad. What should I do? - legal name change washington state
Bad odor from your home. He is in prison. I am a manager in the process of eviction.
Am I allowed into the apartment and worry about the smell before the evacuation is complete? I started the process at the prison, and I am in Washington. I take care of an obligation to other tenants on these things. The power is off and the Public Utility District said it must leave the house before he could his name with the name change and the dwelling itself again. I think that's just the smell of decaying waste and food, etc.
Thank you for your answers.
Monday, January 11, 2010
Legal Name Change Washington State Landlord/Tenant, Legal Issues While Tenant Is In Jail And Apartment Smells Bad. What Should I Do?
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3 comments:
You can enter the apartment, and with 24 hours in advance, which can be left at the door. It must be delivered by hand and without knowing with certainty that he disagrees with the notice.
Edit:
You can also enter without notice in an emergency, like someone said, but a bad smell is not exactly an emergency, is not it?
You should have a lawyer with the way it should work to consult, but I think the landlord has the right to enter the apartment when the door immediately if they have no effect on the cause (like a bad smell that indicate that leaks, mold or other problems).
Check leasing, also ... The lease must be something that give holders a right to specific circumstances.
You do not have to give up 24 hours in an apartment if it is an emergency.
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