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Kicking out a roommate in winter against Kansas law?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Fish9901
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HomeGuru

Senior Member
djohnson said:
I assume it's the girlfriend but I don't think it matters as they are asking a legal question and whether we agree with it or not it deserves a legal answer. I don't about your state, nor do I know of a law that states that , however that would be to tenants. If there is no lease or anything, and she is not listed on the property in anyway, then there is nothing keeping him from changing the looks the next time she leaves the house.

**A: incorrect response as she is a legal tenant even if there is no written lease.
Maybe that is why she is the ex because he wants to change the looks.
 


djohnson

Senior Member
dequeendistress said:
D Johnson are you correcting me for inquiring if this is a girlfriend?

**Not trying to correct anything, just keep the post on topic and point out that if someone comes here looking for a legal answer, that answer should not change based on if we think they need it or not. The person wanting to know doesn't change the answer, so it makes no difference who it is. If you think it does, that's a personal problem of yours.

Can you explain to me how to change the looks? Plastic surgery or Michael Jackson transformation?

**It took me a minute to understand that you seem to have focused on a typo. Very mature and intelligent of you, I must commend you on your perfection.


If you mean loCks then if you reread the original posts, it is inferred that the homeowner is NOT the one trying to get rid of the ex wife.

**It still doesn't change the fact. If I ask a legal question it deserves a legal answer. By prejudicing yourself against the poster based on what the relationship might be is childish and silly. If you want to make personal comments do so, but infer it changes things, because it doesn't.

IE he is the one making the too cold to evict excuse and NO there is not a law that states the temp. outside must be at a certain degree to evict someone. Or it is an out of season eviciton....If such a law exits I would appreciate a link to the statute.


**I said I didn't know of a law that said that so this part of your post is redundant.


The only and absolutely only thing I can think of this may apply to would be a utility service not disconnecting someone due to the temperatures outside. And that has NOTHING to do with an eviction.

**Agree this has nothing to do with an eviction and is totally off topic again.

:rolleyes: :rolleyes:
 
F

Fish9901

Guest
Technically, its his problem (according to him) that he cant give her the boot without going through the whole court thing because its winter time. He tells me he wants her out, this is the excuse he gives me for her not moving out. Could be true, could be just a convenient excuse to explain her presence there for the next several months while things are 'tied up in court' until he can come up with the next coverup for the fact she still lives there because they are still married (which is my suspicion, not that this is the argument or question here at all, this belongs on a forum for Real Life soap operas, not a legal question/advice forum) If Kansas divorce records were public, I would be all over them, but they arent, so I'm merely checking the validity of statements he has made to me regarding other things.

I believe in the whole court thing due to the At will tenancy things I have found online, but I'm seriously doubting the excuse he gave about being winter. Sounds to me like he would have to do that all regardless if she didnt agree to moving out.

As I said, call it poor judgement on my part to say anything except to ask the question:

B]Is it against Kansas law to kick someone out of a place in the wintertime?[/B]

This was my question, which got all muddled up because of my giving out more information than was necessary and people focusing in on the juicy story of: OOO, shes the mistress wondering why the wife wont leave! =P

Which it sounds like there isnt any such law, although the laws of At Will Tenancy do apply which could lead to the courtroom battles he described and such. Sorry for the rambling[
 
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Fish9901

Guest
Thank you =) And thank you to everyone that replied =) Thats what I was wanting to know (about the law)

And no hard feelings over any of this on my part, I left myself wide open for it without thinking, next time, I'll be smarter in my posting =)
 

HomeGuru

Senior Member
Fish9901 said:
Thank you =) And thank you to everyone that replied =) Thats what I was wanting to know (about the law)

And no hard feelings over any of this on my part, I left myself wide open for it without thinking, next time, I'll be smarter in my posting =)

**A: I hope the ex is not leaving herself wide open. Then again, if she is, that may be a reason why she is not getting kicked out.
 

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