The manager sent a leyter evicting me because he stated my mom has been gon since jan. Lie its feb. & since she wasnt coming home & no longer lives here I have 45 days to get out. Move the mobile home in 1 letter. I was devastated. Noone told me she wasnt coming home. Where did he get his info?? I own the home as well but am on lease as a caregiver. Im 66. He sent me 2 letters and i am in no way shape or form ready to pack all this up and move. How could he do this???? I am so stressed out to the max. What can i do??
I hope you are able to find some help.
Who has been paying monthly fee?
Is your mother returning to her home or not?
I think you require an attorney consult for options in this.
If you are also an owner BUT not on the lease agreement for the land the mobile home sits on then you would have to sign a lease in YOUR name.
If you are not within the age of the Mobile Home Community then you would have to leave since that would be a violation.
All that said...You have been sent a letter. He still needs to go to court to legally evict you from the property. The Judge in court will probably give you 30 days to leave. But the case may take 30 to 60 days to come to court. That does give you a bit more time to figure out exactly why you are being evicted and where you will go.
Has there been failure to pay rent? You will need to provide documentation with your legal rep. to confirm that you are in compliance with the rental agreement.
You stated your were sent 2 letters. You will need to provide both letters to your legal rep. for them to access the validity and advise you.
Good luck.
Where is Mom. Read her lease, it may stipulate that if she personally is not living in the trailer after a certain period of time, the trailer must be sold or moved.
"Meeting the criteria to stay in the age income based park" does not trump what is written in the contract signed by your Mom. You don't get to decide this how or why. Landlords encounter all sorts of problems with tenants and he probably is acting based upon past bad/expensive experiences.
Nonetheless, find yourself an advocate. Communicate with him in writing (email or text) only so there's a record of what he said to you and when.
Also, eviction is usually a 30-day process yet your original post is from July. He's not mean, he's a businessman who has reasons for moving along with the eviction. This is now a legal battle, and my advice to you is to find a legal advocacy group or consult with an tenant's attorney.
Moreover, you are correct that he cannot predict whether or not your Mom is returning, and cannot have information regarding this. Though, let's be honest; it is a good guess isn't it? If your mother IS coming back, then a letter from her MD should be sufficient to vouch for that. If she isn't, you might consider being honest, showing your ownership papers and applying for the space in your own name.
Do know that evicting someone from their SPACE in a Park is difficult to accomplish if they own the trailer. Most are permanently installed with foundations, and etc. It won't be easy to do, and it will be a good deal easier to allow you to transfer the trailer which is in your name to space which you apply for. It would require paperwork giving up your mother's rights.
You currently are asking a Forum of utter strangers to guess at what the circumstances are. You would be much better to rationally and with all information, approach the manager of the Park. Am wishing you the best.
He told you, your not on the lease so you have no tenant rights. If your not on the deed to the trailer, you don't own it. Is it an very old trailer? We had a trailer park go 55 and up. The residents who had children were grandfathered in as were those under 55. Those that passed, if the trailers were old, they had to be removed. The newer ones sold. Really some of those trailers looked like a good wind would topple them.