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Minnesota Eviction Expungement form.?

As shown here:

http://mncourts.gov/Default.aspx?page=513&item=294...

My girlfriend wants to know if she can get her eviction expunged. She rented a town home seven years ago with two other tenants and after six months was evicted for failing to pay rent.

They never contacted her. She tried to get an apartment last week and they told her that because she had an eviction notice on her record she needed to contact the landlord of that property and get proof she didn't owe them anything.

They said she owed them $4,000 for cleaning, back rent and other misc fees. Don't feel bad for the landlord, they made over $8,000 in rent and were able to write off $12,000 in income taxes.

She asked for a detailed bill which said she owed them $0.00 because everything had been written off as bad debt. That $0.00 was crossed out and $12,000 was put in it's place. Then they said that they would accept $6,000 if she could come up with it.

It doesn't seem legal for them to ask for money that they have already taken a tax write off on. Because it was seven years ago, they can't even amend their taxes to correct it so these seems outright fraudulent and I have a feeling that any court would agree that if the debt is written off, it is gone. Is this a good reason for getting an expungement?

It also says that if you can prove that it is in the best interest of the public that she be allowed to expunge the record that it should be so. What are good arguments for proving that it would be in the best interest of the public?

Update:

She is trying to get an apartment with me, her mom and her mentally handicapped 20 year old brother. I think the benefit to the state is that they aren't homeless and not breaking fire code. Together we make over 100,000 a year. But since I am on unemployment until I go to basic training I don't qualify to co-sign. She has been evicted so she cannot cosign and since the little brother is a vulnerable adult he can't cosign (even though he has a job and gets social security). Her mom cannot afford triple the rent of a 3 bedroom apartment so we would have to move into a 2 bedroom which exceeds number of people allowed in the dwelling.

1 Answer

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  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    You seem to have judgments and bills mixed up. They can't write off a judgment.

    She is going to have to show that she paid the judgment to the landlord before she can proceed. She does not need a detailed bill at this point, the judgment, plus interest are all that matter. She needed to argue about the details back when she was evicted.

    I can't think of a single way the public benefits from removing this record, but you know her, you know what kind of public contributions she makes.

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