QUOTE(dariofoo @ Mar 17 2011, 10:47 AM)
1. You can lodge a police report but it is unlikely that the police will intervene as it is a civil matter.
2. You can serve an agreement on him, but if he doesn't want to execute it, you can't force him. And NO, it does not "constitutes he is unwilling to be my uncle's tenant any longer".
3. You would have to appoint a lawyer to serve him an eviction notice (with a demand for unpaid rental) - 1 month's notice to surrender vacant possession as he is not a trespasser, but a tenancy-holding-over. A monthly tenancy, so to speak. Once the eviction notice lapses, your lawyer would file an application for an order to evict the tenant. If upon being served with the order, he still refuses to move out, then your lawyer would seek the assistance of the Court bailiff to evict him. That would be the whole procedure.
You can't lock up the place nor can you file a caveat. Why caveat anyway when it is your uncle's own property?
4. Bailiff would come in when the tenant still refuses to leave upon being served with the Court order.
Hope the above helps. Cheers.
Aiyo there are faster way to get them out. Don't pay the water and electric bill and let it cut-off. Later when they cannot tahan no water and electric, they will move out. Later on you can re-connect it back.2. You can serve an agreement on him, but if he doesn't want to execute it, you can't force him. And NO, it does not "constitutes he is unwilling to be my uncle's tenant any longer".
3. You would have to appoint a lawyer to serve him an eviction notice (with a demand for unpaid rental) - 1 month's notice to surrender vacant possession as he is not a trespasser, but a tenancy-holding-over. A monthly tenancy, so to speak. Once the eviction notice lapses, your lawyer would file an application for an order to evict the tenant. If upon being served with the order, he still refuses to move out, then your lawyer would seek the assistance of the Court bailiff to evict him. That would be the whole procedure.
You can't lock up the place nor can you file a caveat. Why caveat anyway when it is your uncle's own property?
4. Bailiff would come in when the tenant still refuses to leave upon being served with the Court order.
Hope the above helps. Cheers.
Mar 18 2011, 04:03 PM

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