Understanding Your Rental Agreement And An Eviction Notice
Almost all landlords will eventually have to evict one of his tenants. To evict means to use legal methods to force a tenant to leave the landlord’s property if they will not do so voluntarily. 
There are many reasons a landlord may have to evict, including the tenant not paying rent or breaching his lease. Sometimes a landlord and tenant just can’t see eye to eye on various things such as repairs or late fees, and the landlord wishes for the tenant to leave but the tenant will not go voluntarily, so the landlord is forced to begin the eviction procedure.
When a landlord finds himself in this type of situation and wishes to file an eviction suit to force the tenant to leave, it is imperative to follow all relevant laws exactly and fill out the legal forms and other papers correctly and accurately. If this is not done properly, your eviction request may be denied and you will have to start over again, but if you do everything correctly and prove your case, the tenant will be legally forced to leave and you will have the full support of the local sheriff in removing him if he still refuses to go.
To try to avoid the cost and aggravation of having to evict a tenant, write out all of the situations or circumstances that would cause you to ask a tenant to leave and include those in your lease agreement so you will have a solid foundation based on breach of contract should you have to file an eviction suit. By signing the lease agreement with these stipulations included, the tenant is agreeing to all these terms when they sign the lease.
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