Legal Question in Landlord & Tenant Law in Illinois

Hello I was hurt at work and have been waiting on my workmans comp checks the problem is now I am 2months behind rent and I informed my landlord of what was going on. I went to one of the places that assist with rent for help and I am approved to be helped I informed my landlord of this and she said that was fine. Well one day while I was out I recieved a hand written five day notice to pay rent or move under my door. A few days later I was served with a eviction. My question is if my landlord stated that it was fine and then I was given a hand written letter and a eviction what am I to do. I am waiting on the place to pay them and then I get a eviction so what do I do? And is a hand written letter legal? Also if they evict me how long do you have to get out. Or if I have the money to pay or partial payment at court can they still evict me? Someone please help. Thank You.


Asked on 1/23/12, 3:24 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

1. The 5-day notice appears to be INVALID as you were not properly served -- unless you abandoned the place or left someone over 13 years old to receive the notice, it had to be served on YOU.

2. Otherwise, the 5-day notice can be typed or hand-written, but must contain the right words. If it does not, it may be invalid on that basis.

3. If you show up in court and admit receiving a proper 5-day notice, you can be evicted.

4. If the 5-day notice is properly worded, the only way to avoid eviction is to pay in full within the 5 days. Partial payment still gives the landlord the right to evict unless the landlord gives a written ok AFTER receiving the partial payment.

5. There are a lot of tricky little things when it comes to evictions today. You may have some good defenses to the eviction but don't know about it because you are choosing to DIY instead of spending the time with an attorney to go through everything.

6. Written notices usually supersede oral communications which are usually one word against the other.

7. If the court orders you evicted, USUALLY there is a 30-day "stay" meaning the landlord can't ask the Sheriff to come out and carry out the final physical eviction process for 30 days, but you may have to ask the judge for that time, and your comp situation should do the trick.

8. Eventually if the landlord wants you out you will be evicted if grounds exist and the landlord properly proceeds. That should not stop you from asserting your legal rights to be evicted properly or to defeat a lawsuit to evict if proper procedures have NOT been employed.

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Answered on 1/23/12, 3:43 pm


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