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The only thing you can do at this point is file a Motion to Stay Execution of Writ of Possession. This motion will put the execution of the eviction order on hold for up to 10 days.
The Writ directs the constable to seize or take control of the premises subject to the order and turn it over into the landlord's possession. In other words, the constable will be forcing the tenant out who has refused to vacate after the Court has ordered the eviction.
The claim can be for no more than $20,000, excluding statutory interest and court costs but including attorney fees, if any. For information on how to sue in Small claims court.
How to file a Motion to stay a writ of possession in Texas? File the Motion with the Clerk of the County Court at the Court where the case was filed. You must also hand-deliver a copy of the Motion to the Judge assigned to your case.
Notorious possession is typically a common law requirement of the doctrine of adverse possession. The requirement establishes that acts of ownership must be observable by others, and not be secret or hidden.
Embezzlement is where the defendant legally has the victim's property in his possession and then misappropriates the property with the intent of defrauding the victim.
In California, a claim of adverse possession allows an individual to gain possession of a property that they do not legally own. To establish adverse possession, the individual must demonstrate open and notorious possession of another person's property for at least a certain period of time, typically five years.
The New York ten-year requirement must be an unbroken and continuous ten years. Although the trespasser may leave and come back for short periods, their use of the land cannot be intermittent. The adverse possessor actually be using the land as if it was his or her own.
New York real estate law: A primer on adverse possession Hostile and under claim of right. Actual. Open and notorious. Exclusive. Continuous for at least 10 years, called the statutory period.
Under our law, a person is guilty of Criminal Possession of Stolen Property in the Fourth Degree when that person knowingly possesses stolen property, with intent to benefit himself or herself or a person other than an owner thereof or to impede the recovery by an owner thereof, and when the property consists of a ...