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Parveen Kr. Aggarwal (Advocate)     04 January 2010

Tenant forcibly occupying first floor

A tenant occupying ground floor of a double storeyed house under oral tenancy agreement forcibly occupies first floor of the house. The first floor was in possession of the landlord and the landlord resides in another town. What remdey the landlord has against the tenant?



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 5 Replies

J.D.Sharma (lawyer)     04 January 2010

file for eviction of the tenant, this is the recourse left to you because in case of oral agreement you cannot possibly produce the cogent evidence regardig the tenanted premises you have originally alloted. But if you do have some evidence you can lodge FIR for criminal tresspass.

subhash kumar (advocate)     04 January 2010

dear. first you lodge a complaint and than file the eviction suit . It is not clear from your side that what was the rent of the tenanted premises

Subhash kumar, adv

Parveen Kr. Aggarwal (Advocate)     07 January 2010

The rate of rent of the ground floor was Rs. 1,000 per month. FIR has already been lodged with the police and the tenant has been released on bail and is facing trial. What civil remedy the landlord has. For getting the entire premises (ground floor and first floor) vacated whether one litigation will do or separate proceedings are to be filed?

subhash kumar (advocate)     07 January 2010

dear, filed the eviction suit immediately and suit for damages Subhash kumar, adv

Parveen Kr. Aggarwal (Advocate)     07 January 2010

Whether there is any difference of legal proceedings for possession of premises occupied with consent and premises occupied forcibly and without consent of the owner?


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