Legal Question in Landlord & Tenant Law in California

I am a landlord with a month to month tenant (of several years) I would like to give a 60 day notice to.

The rental unit is on my property where I live. The tenant has been of late a real rude and unpleasant person and in a personal attack on us, has notified a public agency of a zoning violation that is a legitimate complaint (unrelated to the rental unit).

Even though the complaint was legitimate, the fact that the tenant is of a vindictive mindset worries

me about any sort of ongoing relationship. I don't want to share my property with a person I distrust.

I am afraid of giving him notice due to "retaliatory" issues. Even a long overdue rent increase looks like it can be "retaliatory". I feel held hostage by my tenant. What can I do?


Asked on 9/20/10, 4:56 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

David Gibbs The Gibbs Law Firm, APC

Embrace the downside of being a landlord. Yes, anything adverse you do at this point is going to look retaliatory. I would suggest consulting with a local attorney who handles evictions frequently in the area where the property is located. Here's why - judges who handle evictions range from being somewhat pro-tenant, to being pro-landlord. In any given court, you could win the day because there is no rational relationship between the complaint he filed and your eviction, or you could lose and be "branded" a retaliatory landlord, which will make your tenant somewhat eviction-proof for some period of time. You need to gauge what the Court that will hear your eviction is going to be like. If it's a pro-landlord court, then build the case (with the advice from the attorney with whom you consult) that it is not retaliatory. You don't have to, nor should you give any reason for a sixty-day notice. You are just terminating a month-to-month tenancy.

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Answered on 9/27/10, 11:45 am


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