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A Maine eviction process does not allow a landlord to evict a tenant without good cause. The landlord must either wait for the tenant to commit a violation or wait for their rental term to end. However, tenants can be evicted if they stay in the property even a day after their lease term ends.
Talk to Your Landlord You may be able to come to an agreement without going to court. An eviction will cost both of you money (as well as time), and your landlord may be willing to stop the eviction if you agree to certain terms, such as paying rent you owe or stopping behavior that violates the lease.
The Motion to Stay the Writ of Possession may state that the resident paid the rent, the eviction was unfair, the resident needs more time, the case is defective or just about anything on earth that the resident can come up with to convince a judge that the eviction should be stopped or make the judge feel sorry for ...
If you have a written lease Your landlord can evict you for a "material breach" of the lease. This means that you have violated one of your major duties under the lease, such as payment of rent, not disturbing other tenants, not causing major damage, or some other "material" lease clause.
A landlord must give you adequate notice before you are evicted or your rent is increased. The landlord cannot abuse your security deposits. Tenants always have a right to a court hearing before the landlord can evict them. Unfair rental contracts can be in violation of the Maine Unfair Trade Practices Act.