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Nina Willis evicted


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 Unread postPosted: September 20th, 2012, 4:39 am   
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Joined: June 21st, 2010, 2:46 pm
Posts: 620
Location: Toronto, Ontario
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“Why are you doing this to me? You can’t do this to me!”

Actually...yes we can!

Full article:
http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/1259520--serial-bad-tenant-evicted-by-sheriff-police

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It took five police officers, the sheriff, a landlord and a locksmith, but nightmare Toronto tenant Nina Willis has finally been removed from the building.

“Why are you doing this to me? You can’t do this to me!” Willis shouted at enforcement officers with the Ontario Sheriff’s office from inside the North York house she was evicted from Wednesday.

“I’ve done everything right,” she said.

Willis, who has a history of not paying rent and stalling evictions, has been ordered out of six homes since 2005, including the most recent, according to tenant board and court documents obtained by the Star, as well as interviews with landlords, lawyers and paralegals.

The Star has been following Willis’s case, which shows how easily tenants can manipulate the provincially funded Landlord and Tenant Board using protections designed to avoid unfair evictions to stay in properties without paying rent.

On Wednesday, Willis, two men and a woman, wearing hats and sunglasses, left under police supervision through the fenced backyard of the house Willis had called home for more than a year.

The locks are changed and she has 72 hours to call her former landlord and arrange to collect her things.

Landlord Darius Vakili was pleased Willis was out but said he was “scared of what will happen next,” and is worried she will return and break into the house.

Vakili said police have cautioned him not to enter the house until Willis removes her possessions, and to let police know when she returns to remove her things, as Vakili must be there to let her in.

If she doesn’t call within 72 hours, Vakili can dispose of everything in the house.

“I have a bad feeling they are not going to call me and I will have to clean up all (their) junk,” he said.

Willis first rented the house in July 2011 and moved into the property in late August. Vakili said her first cheque cleared but the second one bounced and after that the only way he received money was through court and tribunal orders.

Willis was ordered out by the Landlord and Tenant Board in April, but appealed the decision, resulting in a stay on the eviction. Her appeal was quashed in August because she didn’t meet the conditions set out by a Superior Court judge, to pay her back rent and what she owed on time.

Last week, she made a last-ditch effort to plead her case before the Landlord and Tenant Board, using a provision in the Residential Tenancies Act that affords tenants one chance during each case to pay what they owe, in rent and to cover fees their landlords incurred during the process.

Willis had paid $11,550 in back rent, but failed to account for a $170 filing fee Vakili had to pay the board, and the eviction was upheld.

On Wednesday, two enforcement officers with the Ontario Sheriff’s office arrived at the house close to noon. Loud shouting was quickly heard from inside and police officers arrived at the house shortly after. Five officers were involved in the removal.

Toronto Animal Services was also called in to remove a light-coloured dog.

Willis has claimed during tenant board hearings that a sister who lives with her has mental health issues and that moving would cause her and her family harm.

Vakili said he has no immediate plans to seek a new tenant and that he first has to see the condition of the house, expecting “to see a lot of dirt” and damage to the property.

“Right now, everything is hidden.”

In May, Willis will appear in a Toronto court to face fraud charges for allegedly providing homeowners with fraudulent cheques and false employment information.

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The lovely thing about money is that it really doesn’t discriminate. It doesn’t care what color or race you are, what class you are, what your parents did, or even who you think you are. Each and every day starts with a clean slate so that no matter what you did yesterday, today begins anew, and you have the same rights and opportunities as everyone else to take as much as you want. -R.Templar


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 Unread postPosted: September 20th, 2012, 5:37 am   
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Joined: June 21st, 2010, 2:46 pm
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Location: Toronto, Ontario
Can a mod please edit the title? I mis-spelled the last name, should be Nina Willis

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The lovely thing about money is that it really doesn’t discriminate. It doesn’t care what color or race you are, what class you are, what your parents did, or even who you think you are. Each and every day starts with a clean slate so that no matter what you did yesterday, today begins anew, and you have the same rights and opportunities as everyone else to take as much as you want. -R.Templar


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 Unread postPosted: September 20th, 2012, 6:58 am   
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Joined: August 8th, 2009, 1:55 pm
Posts: 6793
Im glad she has FINALLY being forced to leave, but it doesnt fix the problem.

Nina Willis will simply find another small landlord and victimize them.

Unfortunately there are many proffessional tenants such as nina willis in ontario.

These types of tenants are encouraged to not pay rent and are protected by our unfair rental laws and biased landlord tenant board.


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 Unread postPosted: September 20th, 2012, 12:51 pm   
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Joined: April 4th, 2012, 4:24 pm
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Location: MARKHAM ON
The scary thing is, she could have stayed if she didn't miscalculate and forgot to pay the $170 filing fee. Then the whole process would have started over.

The landlord looks frazled!

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Landlord Darius Vakili said he is pleased Nina Willis is out but that he's "scared of what will happen next."


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 Unread postPosted: September 20th, 2012, 4:25 pm   

Joined: March 28th, 2012, 12:44 pm
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Has anyone considered how unjust it is when a tenant has paid all her rent and still gets evicted? What a travesty.


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 Unread postPosted: September 20th, 2012, 4:45 pm   
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Location: Toronto, Ontario
Mr Fair wrote:
Has anyone considered how unjust it is when a tenant has paid all her rent and still gets evicted? What a travesty.


It's perfectly justified.
You need to pay ALL, (100%), of the fees outlined on the hearing forms, which two copies of are provided to the tenant by the LTB, and the Landlord. The RTA and LTB also allow landlords to evict tenants for habitually late payments (See forms N8/L2).
In the case of an L1/L2/L4 application package, everything is clearly spelled out on the forms, and the LTB website, not to mention the lessee has free access to duty council, so there's no excuse in my opinion.

Pay your rent, on time, or GET OUT

Tenants who don't pay and are forced to be evicted are essentially STEALING housing from those who need housing and are willing to pay.

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The lovely thing about money is that it really doesn’t discriminate. It doesn’t care what color or race you are, what class you are, what your parents did, or even who you think you are. Each and every day starts with a clean slate so that no matter what you did yesterday, today begins anew, and you have the same rights and opportunities as everyone else to take as much as you want. -R.Templar


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 Unread postPosted: September 20th, 2012, 8:52 pm   
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Joined: March 15th, 2011, 8:10 pm
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Location: Pro Landlordville
I bet this tenants most angry that she paid the rent she owed and still got evicted instead of doing what most bad tenants do: simply leave with all the rent owing and a big "screw you, chase me down if you can" middle finger to the landlord.


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 Unread postPosted: September 21st, 2012, 6:36 am   
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Has anyone considered how unjust it is when a tenant has paid all her rent and still gets evicted? What a travesty.

-there is NO way she would have paid the rent owing if the toronto star had not publicized her case!

Nina Willis has victimized many landlords, she certainly wasnt about to change her ways.

I think the ONLY reasons she was finally evicted was because of a slip up on her part (she forgot to pay the $170 filing fee the landlord had incurred because of nina's negligence) and the LTB realized their unfairness towards landlords was becoming public knowledge.


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 Unread postPosted: September 22nd, 2012, 9:46 pm   
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Joined: November 6th, 2011, 7:56 pm
Posts: 1193
Location: Etobicoke
I wonder why free tenant Legal Aid (Tenant Duty Counsel) missed that $170. Sounds like something they wouldn't miss, unless.....hmmmmmm.

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Steve S.; 13 years in, 50+ doors in 2013


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