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Unless the rental agreement provides a shorter notice period, a California tenant must give their landlord 30 days notice to end a month-to-month tenancy. Tenants should check their rental agreement to see if it requires giving notice on the first of the month or on another specific date.
In Wisconsin, the landlord must not terminate, refuse to renew a lease, or fine a tenant for complaining to the landlord regarding the deposit, complaining to a government agency, or exercising a legal right.
Eviction Procedures The landlord must file a complaint against the tenant in district court. A court hearing must take place within seven to fourteen days after the court issues the summons. The judge will then deliver a decision.
If the tenant fails to pay rent and abide by the lease terms, the new owner may evict the tenant. The new owner must provide notice to vacate 90 days prior to the termination of the lease.
Terminating a tenancy for rent arrears Landlords must serve a copy of the written rent arrears warning notice to the RTB. In rent arrears cases, the 28-day warning notice period will count from the date that both the tenant and the RTB have received the warning notice.

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For more information, contact your court administrator or call the Minnesota State Law Library at 651-297-7651. Use the Eviction Action Complaint (HOU102) to ask the Court to evict a tenant from residential or commercial rental property.
Tenants cannot be evicted for making a complaint against the landlord or for anything discriminatory. Under the Fair Housing Act, its illegal for landlords to discriminate against a prospective tenant based on sex, race, color, national origin, religion, familial status, or disability.
At least two months written notice to vacate no sooner than one month after the end of the contract for deed cancellation period, provided that the tenant pays the rent and abides by all the terms of the lease; or.
In Minnesota, a landlord can evict a tenant without a lease or with a lease that has ended (known as a holdover tenant or tenant at will). To do so, they must first terminate the tenancy by giving proper notice to move out (30 days for tenants that pay month-to-month).
In Minnesota, a landlord can evict a tenant for several different reasons, the most common of which are failing to pay rent or violating the lease or rental agreement. A tenant facing eviction for one of these reasons may be able to challenge the eviction and delay the proceedings or stop the eviction altogether.

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