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How do I evict a tenant who is behind on payments?

- MARIO VOLPI Mario Volpi is the sales and leasing manager at Engel & Volkers. He has worked in the property sector for 34 years in London and Dubai. The opinions expressed do not constitute legal advice and are provided for informatio­n only. Please send an

Q We let out a Jumeirah Village Circle townhouse in Dubai in August last year for Dh140,000 with payments spread over 12 cheques. The tenant asked to deposit cash each month as she claimed her monthly salary was not paid on the same day. We agreed, but each month she fell behind. In April, we served her a notary public 30-day notice to pay in full or risk eviction after she deposited several cheques that bounced. She then started paying a little more, but ended the contract last month with Dh69,792 in arrears. At this point she claimed she had medical problems. Despite this, we met up with her and agreed to sign another year’s contact. This may sound foolish but there were many empty villas around and rents were dropping. She signed another contract under the same conditions and promised to make up the arrears. However, the pattern has continued and we now want to evict her. My questions are:

Does the notary public notice still stand for the first contract despite its completed duration?

What steps should we take now and can they be done online? We work during the hours the Rental Dispute Settlement Committee is open.

Do we have to serve another notary public on the new contract, which is also now in arrears? How can we stop her leaving the country? DW, Dubai A Unfortunat­ely, you will have to resend a new notarised notificati­on, stating that if the arrears are not paid within the 30-day period, you will have no alternativ­e but to escalate matters to the rental committee.

If, after the 30-day window has expired, you have still not received payment, you will be able to file a case. To clarify, you can file a case straight away at the RDSC, however, they will request you send this 30-day notice anyway, so I suggest you do this first. Filing the case has to be done in person so you may have to take time out of work.

This is how to file a complaint at the rent committee:

1. Make sure you have originals and copies of the following documents:

Passport, visa and Emirates ID

Ejari certificat­e Original tenancy contract Recent Dubai Electricit­y and Water Authority bills Rental deposit slip Copies of cheques issued to landlord

Title Deed

Copies of any correspond­ence between the tenant and landlord regarding the rental increase or dispute at hand

If you have an Arabic copy of these documents, it will save you time and money.

2. Filling out a complaint Once you have your papers ready go to the RDSC where a typing centre will fill out your complaint. The typist will translate the necessary documents into Arabic and will ask questions about the nature of your dispute so that your complaint can be formalised correctly. 3. The costs involved: The fee is 3.5 per cent of the annual rent and must be at least Dh500, but not exceed Dh20,000.

There are also costs for Arabic translatio­n. Administra­tion costs come in at Dh110 4. Execution process

The arbitratio­n department is the first of four department­s in the legal process of handling a rental dispute. This department tries to resolve the dispute within 15 days. If the parties are unable to reach a settlement via arbitratio­n, then a lawsuit needs to be filed and a ruling is issued within 30 days.

The decision will be effective unless an appeal is made. The execution department is responsibl­e for enforcing the decisions and judgments taken by the centre, and these judgements cannot be reversed.

5. What to expect once the case has been filed

The RDSC will give you a date and time to go and present your case, but keep in mind that there will be a queue and you might have to wait for a few hours. If the committee decides the case is not straightfo­rward and the documents insufficie­nt, you will need to return another time. The case might take weeks or even months to be resolved, so tenants and landlords are advised to only resort to this once all other means have been exhausted.

In your case a new file will have to be opened on the new contract. With reference to your fear that the tenant may leave the country, report the case to the police, however, use the number 901 and not 999 because this is classified as a non-urgent case.

All monies owed to you will be taken into considerat­ion so despite the fact that there will be two cases, all the expenses will be taken into account.

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