Re: Troublesome Tenant-Please help
I've seen your "Notice" and I'm afraid the lady in Housing Options is right when she says that it is invalid. You referred to it in your post as being a section 21 Notice but I've seen it and it's not. There's a prescribed format for a s.21 Notice which must state various legal jargon. Your "notice" is in effect simply a letter telling her to move out. Sadly you can't do that. She cannot be evicted until you first get a possession order from the court.
Since your Tenant has an Assured Tenancy you cannot use section 21 to remove her because that's only for ASTs. You will have to serve her with a new Notice under Section 8 for her rent arrears.
I'm afraid you're back to square one with the notice. Here's some information taken from a law firm's website to help you understand the process:
Termination of an assured tenancy
The Housing Act 1988 provides that a landlord can only terminate an assured tenancy by serving a notice under Section 8 of the Act. This notice is known commonly as a Section 8 Notice and/or a Notice Seeking Possession.
The notice has to be in a prescribed form and must set out the grounds for possession on which the landlord is relying. The grounds on which the landlord can rely are set out in Schedule 2 of the Act and the landlord can specify more than one.
Some of the grounds set out in Schedule 2 are mandatory grounds. This means that if, at the possession hearing, the judge is satisfied that the landlord has proven the mandatory ground specified in the Section 8 Notice, the judge must make an order for possession.
The remaining grounds are discretionary grounds. This means that if, at the possession hearing, the judge is satisfied that the landlord has proven the mandatory ground specified in the Section 8 Notice, the judge may make an order for possession if it considers it is reasonable to do so. In other words, the court can choose whether or not to make an order for possession and there is no guarantee that it will do so.
Originally posted by mpeverton1980
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Since your Tenant has an Assured Tenancy you cannot use section 21 to remove her because that's only for ASTs. You will have to serve her with a new Notice under Section 8 for her rent arrears.
I'm afraid you're back to square one with the notice. Here's some information taken from a law firm's website to help you understand the process:
Termination of an assured tenancy
The Housing Act 1988 provides that a landlord can only terminate an assured tenancy by serving a notice under Section 8 of the Act. This notice is known commonly as a Section 8 Notice and/or a Notice Seeking Possession.
The notice has to be in a prescribed form and must set out the grounds for possession on which the landlord is relying. The grounds on which the landlord can rely are set out in Schedule 2 of the Act and the landlord can specify more than one.
Some of the grounds set out in Schedule 2 are mandatory grounds. This means that if, at the possession hearing, the judge is satisfied that the landlord has proven the mandatory ground specified in the Section 8 Notice, the judge must make an order for possession.
The remaining grounds are discretionary grounds. This means that if, at the possession hearing, the judge is satisfied that the landlord has proven the mandatory ground specified in the Section 8 Notice, the judge may make an order for possession if it considers it is reasonable to do so. In other words, the court can choose whether or not to make an order for possession and there is no guarantee that it will do so.
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