How I was Hired-n-Fired (was Re: [BC] oops)
Cowboy
curt
Tue Jan 31 07:31:12 CST 2006
On Sunday 29 January 2006 06:17 pm, Rich Wood wrote:
>------ At 01:19 PM 1/29/2006, Radiofldude at aol.com wrote: -------
>
>>Well, they started the process with a 3 day notice, but on that notice
>>stated they had served me with written notice on November 1st to vacate the
>>property. How can I be served with notice to leave on 11/01/05 when
>>i wasn't layed
>>off till 11/11/05?.......
>
>Did you request a hearing? Normally an eviction notice is served by a
>Sheriff or Marshall. There should be some documentation.
In Ohio, one must first serve a three day notice, then go to court
to get an official 30 day eviction notice which will be served by mail,
then another served by the sherrif.
If the tenent shows up in court and claims he never got a three day,
the whole process starts over.
It's not a quick process if a tenent decides not to leave.
Tenents can appeal, and generally stay put for three months
or so all the while stiffing the landlord on rent.
I've had one or two play the system,
and it's a nightmare to do it legally.
>Have you
>contacted the state's labor relations board. They're usually very
>sensitive about an employee not being paid. See if they've withheld all taxes.
So is the Commission, if one files all the appropriate paperwork
at the right time, in the right place.
Claiming tax evasion can get real dicey, real fast !
( and very quickly turn on you if your ducks aren't in a perfect row )
--
Cowboy
http://cowboys.homeip.net
"The four building blocks of the universe are fire, water, gravel and
vinyl."
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