California Landlord's Law Book: Evictions | David Brown, Nils Rosenquest
Your step-by-step guide to evicting a problem tenant in California Sooner or later, nearly every residential landlord has to evict a tenant for nonpayment of rent, property damage, an illegal sublet (including Airbnb), or another violation of the lease or the law. You don't always need to hire a lawyer, but you do need reliable information, particularly if your property is under rent control. Here, you'll find all of the forms you need along with clear, step-by-step instructions on how to: prepare nonpayment of rent notices prepare 3-, 30-, 60-, and 90-day notices complete and serve all required eviction forms deal with tenants' delaying tactics, and file your "unlawful detainer" complaint in court. Just filing an eviction lawsuit may prompt the tenant to leave. If it doesn't, you'll learn how to: handle a contested eviction suit by yourself--and know when to get professional help respond to a tenant's defenses and claims evict a tenant who has filed for bankruptcy or is occupying property you purchased at a foreclosure sale, and collect unpaid rent after you win.