china mom
Happy people ain't haters & haters ain't happy
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2010
- Messages
- 2,580
My tenants at my rental were evicted yesterday. The left a huge pile of stuff and we are required by law to remove it in front the house and leave it outside for either 24 or 48 hours (have to look it up) and notify the tenants to come get their stuff. We then have to take the remaining items to the dump - at our expense. We have a quote for $800 for junk removal.
Yesterday, after the eviction, there was a blackstone griddle a large children's playhouse and one of those little tyke cars plus unknown other stuff under the pile of furniture and things. The items were left on the driveway close to the house and we are "in the cut" which is country speak for off the beaten path. Only one neighbor would easily see the stuff and she also knew the eviction was coming.
This morning, the griddle, playhouse, car and who knows what other items are gone but the big pile is still there for us to deal with. My husband can see into the neighbors yard and she has the grill and playhouse. The trash pile has been strewn about and some is on our lawn.
Technically, removing property from an eviction pile is theft but in order to charge theft, we need a complaining victim (one of the tenants). They are gone and I do not know where they went. After the statutory waiting period, eviction property that is left on public property is considered abandoned but this pile was clearly on our curtilage and our property had to be trespassed upon to get it.
We were hoping that if the tenant did not come back for her stuff, that we would at least get a griddle out of it to offset the sting of the eviction expenses. I don't know which model the griddle was but they retail anywhere from $300-1300. The law states that we can sell tenants abandoned property to recover eviction expenses (but we were probably going to keep it).
Would you confront the neighbor? Threaten legal action? Let it go as it is not worth it?
Yesterday, after the eviction, there was a blackstone griddle a large children's playhouse and one of those little tyke cars plus unknown other stuff under the pile of furniture and things. The items were left on the driveway close to the house and we are "in the cut" which is country speak for off the beaten path. Only one neighbor would easily see the stuff and she also knew the eviction was coming.
This morning, the griddle, playhouse, car and who knows what other items are gone but the big pile is still there for us to deal with. My husband can see into the neighbors yard and she has the grill and playhouse. The trash pile has been strewn about and some is on our lawn.
Technically, removing property from an eviction pile is theft but in order to charge theft, we need a complaining victim (one of the tenants). They are gone and I do not know where they went. After the statutory waiting period, eviction property that is left on public property is considered abandoned but this pile was clearly on our curtilage and our property had to be trespassed upon to get it.
We were hoping that if the tenant did not come back for her stuff, that we would at least get a griddle out of it to offset the sting of the eviction expenses. I don't know which model the griddle was but they retail anywhere from $300-1300. The law states that we can sell tenants abandoned property to recover eviction expenses (but we were probably going to keep it).
Would you confront the neighbor? Threaten legal action? Let it go as it is not worth it?