Anyway. Taking the wife to mandurah tomorrow morning real early to go scoopin for blue swimmer crab. I might not be all that damn romantic but at least im not a racist ignorant redneck like ole mate next door eh
Fooking willy? What a guy. Lawyer up he says. Yeah right and why dont i go to Sudan or somewhere bumfuck to pay for that Lawyers new merc. Sorry willy. The fun vouchers are getting spent on
1 . Food beer etc
2. Kiddys
3. Food and more beer.
4. Wifes new kitchen.
Cant believe you even suggested such a thing willy. Shocked i am
A couple of facts ...
Lawyers/Solicitors in Australia start at $200/hr and $400/hr is common ... and that's just a consultation/advice
On what grievance is BLD have a Court action?
The neighbour brandishing a knife and his reported threatening action is a 'Police matter' and the Police take the neighbour to Court, not BLD.
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The neighbour having War posters on his walls in a private dwelling ... Meh
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The neighbour violating the terms of their lease is a matter for the Real Estate Agency and BLD is not a person in that agreement therefore has no direct influence. Nor do the Police.
What can BLD, in reality do?
1/ Follow up with the Police on what actions they are taking.
Assuming that there is video evidence and Neighbours who witnessed the event, that should be enough for Police action
2/ Make the Real Estate Agency aware of the knife incident. There he could use a Solicitor's letter. The Agency could take more notice of that.
3/ Apply for a restraining order through the WA Magistrates Court.
Restraining OrdersYou can apply to have a restraining order made by the court to protect you from someone who commits family violence or personal violence against you, threatens you or your property harasses, or intimidates you, and you are concerned that it will continue.
4/ Assuming a restraining order is granted and the crazy neighbour violates it, then the Police have another matter of law on which to arrest the nutter.
Dave, you missed your vocation
My real amazement in all this is the restraint exercised my Cyrille, he must have chewed up several non-synthetic belts reading this.
Not if you've got access to some unsavoury mates. Just saying.And it is impossible to kick renters out...
All good in theory.
It took us over three months to get rid of renters in South Auckland - what was meant for a couple with two kids ended up with six+ cars on the front lawn, every room with a mattress - last count close to a dozen people. Agents showed up for viewing appointments but the house was locked with new door locks etc etc etc . . . finally left and the place was trashed. Their pissy bond didn't cover the damage. Housing New Zealand got them a new place, I pity the owner.
Sold the place last month . . . amazing what happens in three years in the Auckland/NZ real estate market.
Another Auckland rental has been with one family for close to 20 years . . . never one tiny bit of trouble. They pay the rates, paint, plumbing etc... and we keep rental low, for the area.
So, it's a toss-up what you get . . . but it certainly isn't easy to get people out
Hahahaha . . . hardly. We're not re-investing. No way we're contributing to this madness.
I know in Canada, you can get free legal advice from law students. Usually at the court. I used them on a $2200 no insurance fine and the student advice actually helped me wiggle out of it. One of the very few wins in my life.
They helped me draft a letter having to do with the reasonable persons clause.
Last edited by Backspin; 13-03-2021 at 10:53 AM.
According to your MFA statistics 70% of the Thai who migrated to Australia since 2000 arrived under various family migration schemes i.e spouses and children of spouse.
BLD take the emotion out of your dispute, it is quite normal in the heat of the moment to lose one's temper but in order to resolve the conflict one needs balance.
Leaving the matter to the authorities and hoping they will act in your interests depends very much on the response of the tenant who at the critical moment could show faux contrition in order to manipulate an outcome permitting him to continue his campaign against you at a future date.
You really have to get the freeholder involved as a responsible party in any proceedings and they need to be put on notice that you mean business. Getting a lawyer to draft a letter is not going to break the bank.
Alternatively, put your property on the market and relocate or hire some Maori goon to cripple him.
If I could be so bold.
My suggestion is that, through what ever method is subtly employed, when the action comes ... it doesn't appear to the next-door-nutter that it came from BLD.
If he is that bat-shit crazy, and just having been evicted from his long-term digs, and unable to re-rent because he is blacklisted (that list does exist) he might decide to 'visit' his neighbour (BLD) who actively disposed him.
Better to get him pissed off with the Police/Courts/Real Estates Agents
IMHO
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