How To Get 3 Years FREE RENT!

Here is my response to @CalebHammer during his Financial Audit – how to get FREE RENT for years.

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  • @LandscapePapi says:

    Its crazy that these laws seems to help scumbags more than they help those truly in need

  • @tacticalaf3877 says:

    At that point you hire the mafia. Will be much cheaper

  • @MatrixCoder01 says:

    “She came with the house” 🤣

  • @mrbond9882 says:

    Theres a thing called professional evictors. The courts have nothing to do with it either….

    • @ELSAMRAS1 says:

      That’s a nice way to actually lose the house. Retaliation against a squatter will land you in trouble. Best thing is to go through the eviction process.

    • @draqon8094 says:

      @@ELSAMRAS1who said your getting caught for retaliation? Just because they get a few bricks thrown through their window and have the place robbed a few times that doesn’t mean im involved in anyway..

    • @specialneedselections1671 says:

      ​@@draqon7938you do realise that it’ll come back to you eventually

    • @hueman4927 says:

      @@draqon7938Yup that’ll hold up in court 👍

    • @kitmarlowe6604 says:

      You’re going to throw bricks through your own windows? 😂😂😂😂

  • @indrajitdey2308 says:

    Story Time!!!
    As an attorney myself I can confirm that it’s a thing. Not all tenants are helpless, some are really out there just to screw with people. I can even share a story. I had a client once he was the landlord, and we were fighting with a tenant at his property. We had a strong case, and we won, we got the order and got hold of the possession.

    Twist!
    The tenant tried to do the same to another landlord, one who had no idea of the previous lawsuit.
    My client, made it his life’s mission to approach the new landlords wherever the tenant went and provide them with actual lawsuit papers with the warning “They tried to get my property, don’t let them take yours”

    Needless to say, those tenants didn’t get a room in the city, last I heard they had to leave the city and relocate about 150 miles away.

    You decide who had the last laugh.

    • @SuperSlimshady1 says:

      How did he know where the tenant was going next? Did he watch him 24/7 watch everywhere he went?

    • @SuperSlimshady1 says:

      How did he know who the new landlords were gonna be?

    • @fazdoll says:

      The tenant had the last laugh. He can always move to new city where he isn’t known yet. It’s like snake oil salesman who skip away and is on to the next town before people figure out his medicines don’t work.

    • @MrGalonge says:

      Your story just proves how exaggerated these claims are. As an attorney, you should know that unlawful detainer actions are limited civil cases (in CA) and are thus expedited. Such cases usually take only one or two months to adjudicate. You should also know that the landlords are almost always represented (relatively cheaply) and the tenants are rarely represented. Your story is typical—go to trial in a month or two and win, thereby evicting the tenant. Claims of “years” come from people who either don’t know what they’re talking about or are cherry picking the extreme cases in which the tenant files a lawsuit alleging landlord mistreatment, such as a breach of the implied warranty of habitability, which a staggering number of landlords seem to know nothing about.

    • @Surviving_nyc says:

      @@MrGalonge idk if your aware but all government offices say we are experiencing delays due to covid. Eviction does take 6months to 1year ive had a roomate that went through it and told me all about it but his situation was different. The guy lost his job after he broke his leg on a ski trip.

  • @lucycaro6131 says:

    When he said “ I am currently going through an eviction “ I thought he meant he was the one being evicted. 😂

    • @SDZ675 says:

      He is. It’s their house now. Also if it’s in California, he’s completely fucked.

    • @nathancabada6814 says:

      @@SDZ675My father’s a landlord In Los Angeles, what reason would he be fucked ?

    • @Slpsii says:

      @@nathancabada6814 I believe California has a law that protects squatters but then again I live nowhere near California and idk the laws lol

    • @weebooooo says:

      @@nathancabada6814 your father should get a real job

    • @Joel-wx7zk says:

      @@nathancabada6814 CA is very generous with Squatter Rights, which is why if you get stuck with such a squatter you could face a multi-year legal battle in which you as the landlord will still be solely responsible for the property taxes, utilities, and mandated repairs of the property.

  • @mauit5036 says:

    Meanwhile my landlord doesn’t fix our kitchen sink, leaky roof and no insulation to keep the house warm during winter and cool during the summer. Yet we are the only tenants that pay rent on time and don’t cause any issues

    • @vorcrogaming3055 says:

      You don’t have to pay rent if the landlord doesn’t fix problems. It should be in the lease that the landlord is responsible for maintenance on the building. If the landlord doesn’t abide by the lease you don’t have to pay. He won’t be able to evict or get back rent even if he fixes it.

    • @bgcno2 says:

      Je can also fix them on his own and deduct the cost from his rent payments if he notified the landlord of the needed repairs and nothing has been done

    • @ericandes4288 says:

      The landlord probably can’t afford to fix it if you’re the only guy paying. Property tax continues even if no one pays.

    • @nathancarnegie9912 says:

      @@ericandes4288sounds like the owners problem lol

    • @sirjimssirjims9047 says:

      Buddy you don’t need to pay rent in that case….

  • @33Duce says:

    Professional tenants need professional evictors.

  • @pantherplatform says:

    I rented a house for three years, paid the rent on time each month and then the owner sold the house to someone and they agreed to let me keep renting it but then filed an eviction suit for non payment of rent claiming they never received my check but they wound up losing because they had brought the checks I sent them with them to court and the judge couldn’t believe her eyes when they fell out of the attorney’s binder after claiming they never got them. It was a scheme from the beginning. It was a fun case tho. Waited until I had 24 hours to vacate, deposited all the rent I was alleged to owe in the court registry, filed an emergency motion to stay writ of possession and won and dragged it out for another month until we went to court. The landlord refused to refund my security deposit claiming court costs which isn’t allowable under Florida landlord tenant law so I sued them for the security deposit, court costs and legal fees and they wound up paying me a considerable sum of money in the end and were not happy. Now I own a nice home on a nice piece of land and don’t have to worry about someone throwing me out over some made up allegations…

    • @Oksure420 says:

      Lmao ok sure
      The attorney just happen to have the checks that you sent for rent but no I don’t need that he even brought them to court again claiming they never received them yeah sorry dude attorneys aren’t that stupid

    • @lizg2447 says:

      ugh that was so satisfying to read😌❤️

    • @IraQxNajafia says:

      Happend to us too, the owners died and their nephew inherited. they claimed we didn’t pay for a whole year and not once did they send us a letter just directly to court. Which was weird since in our country you need to at least send two letters that need to be signed at receiving it.
      Anyways we went and I had all my proof of pay through the bank. The lawyer just stood there, the judge was mad and I was late for school 😂😂😂 they then said “it seems a mistake was made” whatever that suppose to mean. We always pay the 1st day of the month.

    • @iheart138 says:

      This happened to my husband and I right after I had a premature medically needy baby. We had never missed a rent payment and they never fixed anything. We had to pay out of pocket for all repairs even though it was his responsibility. We ended up moving and suing and getting quite a tidy sum of money and all he got were tears. 😂

    • @brianchampaigne5490 says:

      Landlords are the scum of the earth. They take these risks because they chose to make money off of someone else’s living situation. Glad you were able to give them hell.

  • @nigelthornberry007 says:

    It is gonna be a cold day in hell before I feel bad for a landlord

  • @JesusIsSuperior says:

    “Never take a tenancy” is why some people end up homeless when the owner decides to sell someone’s home

    • @JakeAoTK says:

      When I was trying to buy a home to live in, I was advised to stay away from homes that have tenants present. Lease agreements aside, it can be difficult to get them out and even more difficult to conduct a thorough inspection.

      Unrelated to tenants, I had a delay on my move in date and ended up living in my car for a week and while that is hardly much of an inconvenience I can imagine the headaches from a long term eviction problem.

      So in general it’s just a poor idea.

    • @Senator-Wary says:

      You made the choice to rent when you sign the contract READ IT

    • @Falinzin says:

      yeah except it isn’t your home… it’s the landlords property that you’re renting. If you want a home go buy one or lease a condo.

    • @BoostFiend_Bud says:

      The owner doesn’t decide to sell “someone’s home”, the owner is selling their home. Doesn’t mean it’s right to do it while people have a signed agreement, but I can understand situations where an owner HAS to sell a home and that leaves somebody scrambling for a new place.

    • @bobbywilson7662 says:

      Is it really a “choice” when the only other options are, “live under bridge” and “sell enough of your organs to afford your own home”?

  • @mattjenn6316 says:

    Thats when u pay someone to go in at night and steal everything and just keep messing with them until they move

  • @toadphillips3272 says:

    When I was in an apartment my landlord straight up told me I was the only one paying rent and he still gave me a hard time for being a couple days late and his way of kicking the people out was disconnecting the hot water that was attached to my apartment too nothing worst than trying to take a ice cold shower before work. Then when I moved out he practically begged me to stay. That place was a dump actually kind of a nightmare.

  • @nathanlong5703 says:

    I love when landlords give me strategies on how to game the system.

  • @TheMuffinManIsHappy says:

    Make housing affordable. Idgaf some landlord is getting ripped off. It’s sink or swim out here.

    • @dannybrou7645 says:

      You would care if you were the landlord lol. You would make a great professional tenant

    • @skullingtonfx4441 says:

      ​@@dannybrou7645only scumbags want to be landlords lol

    • @dannybrou7645 says:

      @skullingtonfx4441  Interesting… well I’m not personally aiming to become a landlord but if I had the means to buy a place and rent it out then I would be ecstatic to be a landlord, as most people would. Not sure why owning a rental property makes you a scumbag. Elaborate

    • @lethanielsmith6958 says:

      ​@skullingtonfx4441 bro is salty that keeping a roof over your head costs money 🤡🤡

  • @GoodMorningHikers says:

    People don’t sell property that they are having success with. If they sell you a property that has a tenant already, they are trying to offload their problem onto you.

    No one has ever said, “I’m cash flowing this property and I never even hear from the tenants, but I don’t want this free money anymore! Here you take it.”

    Properties with tenants already in place SEEM great on paper, but if they were as great as they seem they would be getting sold. That’s why it’s a red flag.

    • @jasonhurdlow6607 says:

      There are many reasons one might need to sell a property that have nothing to do with the tenants being bad.

    • @adamgillett3663 says:

      They might need to free up a lump sum for their own reasons. Perhaps they buy/Reno/find a tenant while they wait for a sale.

  • @brothaman4578 says:

    Landlords, the people that always steal your deposit, are upset about tenants understanding the law…

    • @VincentVanHalen55 says:

      Well in these cases it’s not so much “understanding” as it is “abusing”

    • @JusticeFrogs says:

      ​@@VincentVanHalen55because landlords never abuse the law

    • @VincentVanHalen55 says:

      @JusticeFrogs  bad landlords sure do. Always going to be evil trash people out there. But “Hey what about those guys over there” isn’t a defense for being a criminal.

    • @jimmyjohnson1870 says:

      @VincentVanHalen55 Extorting people for their basic necessities is trash and evil in any context. It’s like comparing “good kings” to bad kings. There shouldn’t be a king to begin with. They serve no function.

    • @VincentVanHalen55 says:

      @jimmyjohnson1870  I’m confused whose side are you on in this debate? The guy who you think is extorting rent money In exchange for a house ? Or the guy who is extorting a house in exchange for nothing?

  • @josephbarker91 says:

    I was a tenant when I went through bankruptcy. I still paid my rent even though I knew I didn’t have to. My opinion is that it was the right thing to do.

    • @jimmyjohnson1870 says:

      You are a good person, but you shouldn’t have to pay for someone you’ve never met to live off passive income.

  • @MDonuT-of7px says:

    The first law of America: “The worst people get the best treatment.”

  • @user-fc2xk3uv8y says:

    hiring lawyers instead of paying rent is actually hilarious

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