If you’ve been asking around to find out how to serve your tenant with a legal or eviction notice, you may keep asking from one person to another who cannot provide you with any helpful guidance. All the ambiguous information you receive from various sources may be intimidating, especially if you’re outside the UAE, where you’ll feel powerless and without options. Fortunately, Notary Public Dubai offers a service that will be genuinely helpful in managing your properties situated in the UAE.
A landlord may ask a tenant to leave an apartment or office by sending them an eviction notice, also known as a legal notice. The eviction notice must follow a particular format and be notarized before it can be delivered to the tenant by a notary public or sent by registered mail to be legal. Only the legal reasons outlined in Dubai’s tenancy regulations may be used to deliver an eviction notice. It is invalid to serve an eviction notice that does not adhere to the tenancy legislation.
According to Law No. 33 of 2008, Amending Law No. 26 of 2007 regulating the Relationship between Landlords and Tenants in the Emirate of Dubai (Tenancy Law), a landlord may file a lawsuit against their tenants and ask for their eviction for a few legitimate grounds. According to the legislation, there are two sorts of evictions permitted:
1) If a tenant violates the lease agreement or the law before the expiry of the tenancy period, the landlord may seek eviction;
2) If the tenant has not violated the terms of the tenancy agreement or the law, the landlord may nonetheless demand eviction of the tenant upon the expiry of the tenancy contract for lawful reasons.
Article 25(1) of the Law No. 33 of 2008, which governs the relationship between landlords and Tenants in Dubai, there are several violations for which the landlord may demand the tenant be evicted before the contract’s expiration:
Before requesting the eviction, a landlord must give the tenant a formal notice urging them to correct the violation. Legal notice functions as the last caution to a tenant that the landlord is ready to take legal action and that this is the last chance for the tenant to make things right before the landlord can seek eviction. The landlord must use the Notary Public or certified mail to notify the tenant.
The landlord may request eviction of the tenant in the following circumstances:
Subject to such notice being issued through the Notary Public or by registered mail, the landlord must provide the tenant with notice of the impending eviction at least twelve months before the scheduled eviction date.
Read More: Obtaining DEWA/SEWA bill true copy attestation in Dubai
For it to be legally binding, an eviction notice must be drafted and delivered in a certain way.
The first step in this procedure is for the landlord to get it typed out at a notary public. It is recommended to have an eviction notice to a Tenant be written by a UAE-based lawyer because there are specific guidelines that must be followed when writing such a letter. In addition to saving you time and money, this will reduce the possibility of rejection from third parties or governmental bodies.
It is more formal to get a document notarized. Before this legal notice is created, the landlord will have to present several papers such as:
The tenant will subsequently be served with the eviction notice by a notary public or a registered postal courier service, which is the last but not least step. A postal courier is commonly referred to as registered mail. The receiver cannot claim they never got a document transmitted in this method since it requires a signature at the delivery end.
Read more: Ejari True Copy Attestation in the UAE
Before serving an eviction notice to a tenant, it is usually advisable to seek legal counsel to prevent potential legal complications and ensure that the notice is sent following tenancy legislation. Notary Public Dubai can help customers worldwide with legalization and attestation inside and outside the UAE.
Please email us at notary@hhslawyers.com if you have any questions or want to employ our services if you are concerned about this process.
Hassan Humaid Al Suwaidi is a UAE Citizen and the founder of the firm HHS Lawyers. He has a vast experience of 20 years of dealing with high-value and complex notary requirements. Hassan has been involved in some of the largest legal settlements in the UAE and is commended for his ability to attain the most favourable outcomes for his clients.