Pets Violation of Landlord to follow through with lease agreement

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Bar47row

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Have an instance where an tenant is following every rule and part of the lease, but because of her having cats(according to them),are causing undue damage and problems to the carpet, they present a hazard, knowing full well(and in every way),they could have brought this to her attention and the situation could have easily been resolved. Rather, they present her with an eviction notice, not ever given her the exact time, day or when she was supposed to leave the apartment or housing complex. This is not the first incident where the tenant followed every rule(of the covenant or agreement), and then either they find something(or past problem), and though it was resolved with complaint by either parties, still without warning, letter, visit, call, e-mail, text or paperwork(proving that the tenant was told that the action would take place), and a reasonable amount of time would being given to the tenant, would be given where she could make arrangements and plans to leave, before the eviction notice would be signed my company management, witness(es), and others including the apartment manager. The lease being signed stating both the responsibilities of the tenant and management and only the tenant follows through with their responsibilities, and the management claims amnesia, and acts as though and said(lies under oath to a judge or legal authority),that it never happened or took place. What is wrong with this situation!
 
An eviction is order from a court, not from a landlord. A letter from the landlord is nothing more than a request, and you have no obligation to honor it. You do not have to leave until a judge orders you out, and you will be given a very clear date if that happens. Before that can happen the landlord will have to present the judge with a good reason to order the eviction. So long as the tenant is paying on time and following the rules it is unlikely the landlord would win an eviction.
What the landlord can do is simply end the lease when it expires, which also requires proper notice... but even then you still don't have to leave until a court orders it.
 
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