Couple seeks court's help to evict 30-year-old son from their home

RoseRed

American Beauty
PREMO Member
A New York couple is so desperate to get their 30-year-old son out of their house that they’ve enlisted the court’s help to evict him — and the man isn’t going down without a fight.

Christina and Mark Rotondo filed a petition in the Supreme Court of New York State earlier this month saying they’ve been trying to evict their son, Michael Rotondo, from their Camillus home for the last three months, CNYCentral reported. Their son has refused to leave even after repeated notes left for him.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/05/2...to-evict-30-year-old-son-from-their-home.html

Any guesses on which forum member this could fit?
 

vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron
Reading that, it's not difficult to see why the kid turned out the way he did. The parents must work for the UN.
 

RoseRed

American Beauty
PREMO Member
Reading that, it's not difficult to see why the kid turned out the way he did. The parents must work for the UN.

I'm willing to bet that little #### was NEVER given any chores and he turned into an entitled freeloader.

Michael also said he lived at his parents’ house for eight years and has never been expected to contribute to expenses and do chores.
 

Monello

Smarter than the average bear
PREMO Member
Just change the locks when he's out and about. Problem solved. Box up his stuff and move it to the curb.
 

Ken King

A little rusty but not crusty
PREMO Member
Just change the locks when he's out and about. Problem solved. Box up his stuff and move it to the curb.

It's typical that to get anyone out that has been an occupant (more than 30 days) they must be evicted by the accepted process for the state you live in. Changing locks and packing out their possessions could get you sued.
 

BOP

Well-Known Member
It's typical that to get anyone out that has been an occupant (more than 30 days) they must be evicted by the accepted process for the state you live in. Changing locks and packing out their possessions could get you sued.

Or, you could make friends with your local outlaw motorcycle club.
 

Monello

Smarter than the average bear
PREMO Member
It's typical that to get anyone out that has been an occupant (more than 30 days) they must be evicted by the accepted process for the state you live in. Changing locks and packing out their possessions could get you sued.

But in the mean time he's out of the house. He sues you but that takes time. He'd have to find a place to live until the court date. Then ask for a continuation, push that thing off for as long as you can. I'd be surprised if he'd want to move back in after that.

If he did move back in they could put a lock on his bedroom. Put locks on all the bathrooms. Hard to stay somewhere when you have nowhere to sleep and have to #### in the woods
 

Ken King

A little rusty but not crusty
PREMO Member
But in the mean time he's out of the house. He sues you but that takes time. He'd have to find a place to live until the court date. Then ask for a continuation, push that thing off for as long as you can. I'd be surprised if he'd want to move back in after that.

If he did move back in they could put a lock on his bedroom. Put locks on all the bathrooms. Hard to stay somewhere when you have nowhere to sleep and have to #### in the woods

And then he gets a stay for the illegal eviction along with a protective order and his parents are forced to leave "his residence" while the thing drags out through the courts.
 

awpitt

Main Streeter
But in the mean time he's out of the house. He sues you but that takes time. He'd have to find a place to live until the court date. Then ask for a continuation, push that thing off for as long as you can. I'd be surprised if he'd want to move back in after that.

If he did move back in they could put a lock on his bedroom. Put locks on all the bathrooms. Hard to stay somewhere when you have nowhere to sleep and have to #### in the woods

Monello.... Ken is correct on this. Going your path would cause nothing but major problems.
 

awpitt

Main Streeter
Have to put some blame on the parents here. They allowed this situation to exist for a long time.
 

Midnightrider

Well-Known Member
Monello.... Ken is correct on this. Going your path would cause nothing but major problems.

I’ve seen it happen. The freeloader calls the cops and they tell the owner they can not kick the person out without notice. Usually the
Police ask one party to leave to cool off. During that time the freeloader gets a restraining order and the owner gets kicked out of their own home until they can complete the legal eviction process.
Talk about jacked up
 

PsyOps

Pixelated
I’ve seen it happen. The freeloader calls the cops and they tell the owner they can not kick the person out without notice. Usually the
Police ask one party to leave to cool off. During that time the freeloader gets a restraining order and the owner gets kicked out of their own home until they can complete the legal eviction process.
Talk about jacked up

And who created these stupid laws? We did. The people. We elected people that would impose such things on decent Americans; stripping us of our right to ownership and say-so over how we own it. Vrai said "you reap what you sow"? Yup!
 
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