Legal Question in Landlord & Tenant Law in California

Am I able to evict a legally mentally disabled tenant? There is a tenant in my building that is a constant nuisance to many of the other tenants. He continually spits on the door of one tenant, he has knocked over another tenant while she was being helped into the building from her wheelchair, will prop his door open with a large stick and blare his music, and has been known to open his door and just shriek for no reason and then slam his door shut. Some tenants feel threatened and others just annoyed. He has openly stated that because he is "disabled" that he will continue to do as he pleases and there is no way to get rid of him. What can I do?


Asked on 7/15/11, 2:45 pm

3 Answers from Attorneys

Roy Hoffman Law Offices of Roy A. Hoffman

If he is a month-to-month tenant (and assuming you are not in some sort of rent control district) you can give him either a 30 of 60 day notice to termiante the temancy (30 days if he has resided in the premises for 1 year or less or 60 if he has lived there more than 1 year). Month-to-month tenancies can be terminated for any reason not prohibited by law (i.e., based on race, religion, national origin, etc.). If there is a written month-to-month rental agreement he may also be violating a provision in that agreement which might allow you to give 3-days notice to cure. If he refuses to vacate at the end of the notice period you need to file an unlawful detainer action to evict him.

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Answered on 7/15/11, 3:42 pm
kevin sullivan Law Office of Steven Kremer

Yes. You can evict a tenant who is creating a nuisance after serving them with a notice. These cases with mental issues are tricky because you get into reasonable accomodation issues. Please call me to discuss this matter. My office handles unlawful detainer eviction proceedings.

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Answered on 7/15/11, 4:04 pm
George Shers Law Offices of Georges H. Shers

Both answers above are correct. But evictions can become tricky and with a tenant with mental problems such as you describe, in the long run it will likely cost you less money, ans certainly less pain, to hire an attorney to handle the matter.

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Answered on 7/15/11, 5:18 pm


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