If your tenant won't fix the problem or move out, you'll have to go through the court to get an order for them to move out. The eviction process can take 30 - 45 days, or longer. The time starts from when you have eviction court forms delivered to your tenant to the time they must move out.
Michigan eviction laws vary from county to county, but they still follow the same general eviction process: Send a clear written notice. Fill out the forms. Serve the tenant. Attend the trial. Wait for judgment.
If your tenant won't fix the problem or move out, you'll have to go through the court to get an order for them to move out. The eviction process can take 30 - 45 days, or longer. The time starts from when you have eviction court forms delivered to your tenant to the time they must move out.
Single family residences and condominiums are exempt from the Rent Adjustment Ordinance if the unit is rented as one single unit and not rented room by room for more than 30 continuous days (like a rooming house).
The Ellis Act is a state law (Government Code Section 7060 et. seq.) designed to allow landlords to get “out of the rental business.” In order for Ellis evictions to be approved, landlords must remove all units within a building from the rental market for five years. It cannot be applied to just a single unit.
By law, security deposits must be returned when the tenant moves out, minus allowed expenses. The law limits the amount of security deposits. o Until July 1, 2024, the limit is two times the monthly rent (or, for furnished units, three times the rent). o After July 1, 2024, the limit is one month's rent.
Subletting your apartment without informing your landlord is generally not advisable and may violate your lease agreement. Most lease agreements require tenants to obtain permission from the landlord before subletting. If you sublet without notifying your landlord, you could face consequences such as:
A property owner must let an original tenant replace a roommate who was allowed under the lease. If the lease requires the property owner's approval of a sublet, the owner may object to a replacement tenant only if the property owner has a reasonable basis to do so.
California law requires tenants to seek explicit, written permission from their landlords to sublet if it is not already allowed in the lease. Landlords have the right to approve or deny these requests unless prohibited by a local ordinance.
99.9% of all lease/rent contract state no subletting. When you get caught, all persons in the property will be evicted. Then the sub-tenant will be suing the tenant for getting evicted.