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Updated about 11 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Kevin Fletcher
  • Denver, CO
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Small Claims Court?

Kevin Fletcher
  • Denver, CO
Posted

This Topic came up on another forum post and It got me to wondering,

As a tenant/Landlord, What is the minimum amount of money you would go to Small claims court for in a monetary dispute? I never really think to handle disputes this way and It seems to me like under a certain amount it is waste of time and resources.

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Joel Owens
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Canton, GA
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Joel Owens
  • Real Estate Broker
  • Canton, GA
ModeratorReplied

I think the bigger question is with tenant screening.

I find many landlords do not properly screen tenants. Then when a default happens you basically have a non-collectible judgment proof tenant.

If a tenant answers to the court but doesn't show up, is personally served a notice and signed, or shows up to court for an answer then the judge can grant a judgment against the tenant in favor of the landlord.

If none of that occurs at least here in Georgia you have to go after them in small claims court to get a judgment. Even if you get a judgment good luck collecting on it. Collection companies do nothing but bark with damaging credit which tenant doesn't care. Attorneys just send a letter that most tenants ignore. The judgment recovery companies are usually the best bet. Two options are generally a partner 50/50 with the judgment company and they pay court costs to pursue bank levy, wage garnishment etc. OR they buy your judgment for 10 to 15 cents on the dollar which you get right away and you are done with it. The judgment company will have ZERO interest buying your judgment that is not collectible and spending time and money on it. This is not their first rodeo and they want to make money on a collectible former tenant for the time and money invested. Many landlords go as far as to spend a bunch of money trying to get a judgment that in many cases is worth nothing.

The first question the judgment company will ask is if the tenant is judgment proof and want to see your file on them. An honest judgment company will tell you sometimes it takes years to collect anything and the former tenant can still file BK later on and wipe out your judgment.

What we would do is just let the judgment sit there after getting it and if years later they come to you which sometimes happens to settle you get something. Judgments do not collect anything about 90% of the time.

You get more of these situations with low income tenants who have big fluctuations in money all the time and have hard times paying even if they want too.

What you learn from years of this experience is to NOT under any circumstances let marginal qualifying tenants in a unit just to fill it up. You are better off dropping market rents or giving a first month special to get the best tenant available with the most qualifications. They have something to lose with credit and other things and will want to preserve things if they have to leave. The marginal tenants really have almost nothing to lose.

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