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not likely these thing are genaly stored for a while with a particular agent and goes no further. Answer The eviction notice would only become public if an eviction lawsuit was filed. In that case, the eviction notice would be an exhibit to the complaint for eviction.
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If you were a co-signer on the apartment, the eviction may become part of your record.
you are able to display posters and notices for the public to read
Answeryes it is possible to have the eviction stopped all you have to do is talk to your landlord and tell them that you will pay the money and if you pay it before or on your court date most likely they will let you finish out your leaseAnswerProvided that you were given the proper pre-eviction notices (as required by your state's laws), the landlord is not required to dismiss the eviction lawsuit after it has been filed. Even with full payment, the landlord can demand that you vacate and surrender the property.If after a eviction notice is filed and landlord accepts payment (in full) from you the eviction becomes null and void. They can only evict you for non payment and you have to be in non payment status at the time you go to court. However, if you have the money to pay your rent in full prior to the court date, the landlord has the right to refuse the payment.
Most of the time it won't unless the managers or owner ran a credit check before you moved in, if so it would be listed as "public record" on your credit report because they had to file an eviction notice at the courthouse in order to get you out.AnswerThe actual eviction does not show up in the body of a credit bureau credit report. If a judgment for nonpayment is granted for unpaid rent or other cause, that judgment appears on the credit report under public records. The actual eviction will not. However, most landlords now use third party agencies to obtain the credit bureau credit information and combine it with court records(public information about filings, not just judgments.) Those 3rd party reports often include followup with former landlords. Thus the disclosure of evictions. Good luck!
No. But it may still be in the court records forever, filed under the names of the parties.