By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 3 contracts
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement, Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement, Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them. They will also have the right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- sub-tenant, or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner, or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within six months. • the landlord is an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, it is occupied by someone who used to be employed by the council for education purposes and now it is needed for someone else for those purposes. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 2 contracts
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement, Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful sub-tenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub tenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, end within six months. • We are an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, you used to be employed by us for education purposes but you are not now (or will soon cease to be) and it is needed for someone else for those purposes. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 2 contracts
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement, Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning warnings to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful sub-tenants, lodgers or assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you You owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • youYou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the The condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub-tenant or somebody in your household. • youYou, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we We gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, house or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the The numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence office of overcrowding. • we We intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the The house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house The housing is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we We have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, within end in six months. In the six cases given above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we We want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 2 contracts
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement, Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, civil partner, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; , if we know about them. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • : you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, you or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-anti- social to anyone else in the locality locality, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of such a person, and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You or you, someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused cause alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within in six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-ex- wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, subtenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful sub-tenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub tenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, end within six months. • We are an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, you used to be employed by us for education purposes but you are not now (or will soon cease to be) and it is needed for someone else for those purposes. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. Agreement • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. locality • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub-tenant or somebody in your household. household • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. home • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. house • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards, or has harassed, someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. house In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16 (2) (aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, a nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, house or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. house • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. overcrowding • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. there • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. has • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs needs,but we require the house for someone who has. has • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. months • we are an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, you used to be employed by us for education purposes, but you are not now (or will soon cease to be) and it is needed for someone else for those purposes In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. 0000 • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful sub-tenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, you or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within in six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. Agreement • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. locality • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub-tenant or somebody in your household. household • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. home • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. house • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-acted in an anti- social to anyone manner towards, or has harassed, someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. house In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, a nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, house or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. house • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. overcrowding • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. there • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. has • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs needs, but we require the house for someone who has. has • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. months • we are an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, you used to be employed by us for education purposes, but you are not now (or will soon cease to be) and it is needed for someone else for those purposes In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. 0000 • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 Act 2001 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • · you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • · you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • · the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, subtenant or somebody in your household. • · you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • · we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You· you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You · you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • · the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • · we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • · the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • · the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • · we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. In the six cases above· [we are an islands council, the sheriff must grant an order house is held for eviction if we also offer education purposes, you a suitable alternative house as defined used to be employed by Schedule 2 us for education purposes but you are not now (Part 2or will soon cease to be) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000and it is needed for someone else for those purposes]. • · we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000Act 2001. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, subtenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. • [we are an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, you used to be employed by us for education purposes, but you are not now (or will soon cease to be) and it is needed for someone else for those purposes]. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, subtenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above these cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in in, or in the neighbourhood of of, the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning warnings to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful sub-tenants, lodgers or assignees. They will also have the right to take part in court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that the Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you You owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone Someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the The condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub-tenant or somebody in your household. • youYou, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we We gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. • In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the The numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence office of overcrowding. • we We intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the The house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house The housing is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we We have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within in six months. In the six cases given above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we We want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 Act 2001 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, subtenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000Act 2001. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000Act 2001. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We W e will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; your lawful sub-tenants, lodgers and assignees, if we know about them. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has have been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- sub-tenant, or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of such a person and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You or you, someone residing in your house has have been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, habitee (providing that the co-habitee has resided in the house as their only or principle home for a period of not less than 6 months) where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, subtenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. In the six cases above• [we are an islands council, the sheriff must grant an order house is held for eviction if we also offer education purposes, you a suitable alternative house as defined used to be employed by Schedule 2 us for education purposes but you are not now (Part 2or will soon cease to be) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000and it is needed for someone else for those purposes]. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff Sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 Act 2001 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; , if we know about them. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • : you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub-tenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to manner towards anyone else in the locality locality, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of such a person, and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-no one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff Sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000Act 2001. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-ex- wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000Act 2001. The sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is a member of your family aged 16 or over, your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assigneejoint tenant, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them. They will also have a right to take part in court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub-tenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards, or has harassed, someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, a nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. we are an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, you used to be employed by us for education purposes but you are not now (or will soon cease to be) and it is needed for someone else for those purposes. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • 0000 we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, you or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. • In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has • continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and • no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within in six months. • the landlord is an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, it is occupied by someone who used to be employed by the council for education purposes and now it is needed for someone else for those purposes. • In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff Sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful sub-tenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that the Act. • : you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub-tenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-acted in an anti- social to anyone manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within six months. we are an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, you used to be employed by us for education purposes but you are not now (or will soon cease to be) and it is needed for someone else for those purposes. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff Sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • ; we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff Sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habiteepartner, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant Joint Tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your housethe property, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house property or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or of a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house property or the locality. • the condition of the house property or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, you or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habiteepartner, have been absent from the house property for more than six 6 months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy Tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the houseproperty. • You, someone residing in your housethe property, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another houseproperty. In all the above cases, the sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You or someone residing in your house the property has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the houseproperty, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused cause alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another houseproperty. • the numbers of people in the house property amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house the property (or the building in which it is located) } within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house property has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house property for someone who has. • the house property is part of a larger group of houses properties, which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs needs, and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house property for someone who has. • we have leased your house the property from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within six in 6 months. • the Landlord is an islands council, the property is held for education purposes, it is occupied by someone who used to be employed by the council for education purposes and now it is needed for someone else for those purposes. In the six 7 cases above, the sheriff Sheriff must grant an order for orderfor eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house property as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house property to your husband or wife spouse (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wifespouse) or co-habiteepartner, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house property as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenantsubtenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them. They will also have the right to take part in court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. agreement • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. locality • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, you or somebody in your household. household • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. home • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. house • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to manner towards (or harassed) anyone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. house In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, causing nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. house • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. overcrowding • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. has • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-no one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. has • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within in six months. In the six 6 cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2Part2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. 0000 • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff Sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is a member of your family aged 16 or over, your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assigneejoint tenant, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them. They will also have a right to take part in court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. : • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. ; • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. ; • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub-tenant or somebody in your household. ; • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. ; • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. ; • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards, or has harassed, someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. ; In all the above cases, the sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. : • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, a nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. ; • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. ; • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. ; • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. ; • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. ; • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. ; In the six cases above, the sheriff Sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. : • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. ; OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • : ▪ you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • ▪ you, your sub-tenant or someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • ▪ the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub-tenant or somebody in your household. • ▪ you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • ▪ we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You▪ you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-acted in an anti- social to anyone manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You . ▪ you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • ▪ the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • ▪ we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • ▪ the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • ▪ the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • ▪ we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • ▪ we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-ex- wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, you or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone else in the locality vicinity, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of such a person, and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. Sample • You or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within in six months. • the landlord is an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, it is occupied by someone who used to be employed by the council for education purposes and now it is needed for someone else for those purposes. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, subtenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff Sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask you for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 Act 2001 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful sub-tenants, lodgers, and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, you or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone else in the locality vicinity, or has pursued a course of anti-social conduct amounting to harassment of such a person. • someone residing at your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone else in the locality, or has pursued a course of anti-social conduct amounting to harassment of such a person, and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance nuisance, or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality house or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within in six months. • the landlord is an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, it is occupied by someone who used to be employed by the council for education purposes and now it is needed for someone else for those purposes. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000Act 2001. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000Act 2001. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, you or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. • In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has • continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and • no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within in six months. • the landlord is an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, it is occupied by someone who used to be employed by the council for education purposes and now it is needed for someone else for those purposes. • In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-co- habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 Act 2001 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you You owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • youYou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the The condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, subtenant or somebody in your household. • youYou, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we We gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2) (aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the The numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we We intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the The house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the The house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we We have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000Act 2001. • we We want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000Act 2001. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 years or over; if we know about them, your lawful sub-tenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub tenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality locality, and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, end within six months. the landlord is an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, it is occupied by someone who used to be employed by the council for education purposes and now it is needed for someone else for those purposes. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-ex- wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house use as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about themover and your lawful sub-tenants lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained stated in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your the house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, tenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. ; • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your the house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your the house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality locality, and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your the house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your the house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, end within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife or civil partner (or ex- husband or ex-wifewife or former civil partner) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about themover and your lawful sub-tenants lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained stated in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your the house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, tenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. ; • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your the house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your the house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality locality, and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your the house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your the house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, end within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife or civil partner (or ex- ex husband or ex-wifewife or former civil partner) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff Sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your housethe property, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house property or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or of a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house property or the locality. • the condition of the house property or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, you or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, habitee have been absent from the house property for more than six 6 months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the houseproperty. • You, someone residing in your housethe property, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards you, or has harassed someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another houseproperty. In all the above cases, the sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction, unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notice within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with Section 10(2) (aa) of the Act. • You you or someone residing in your house the property has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the houseproperty, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused cause alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another houseproperty. • the numbers of people in the house property amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house the property (or the building in which it is located) } within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house property has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house property for someone who has. • the house property is part of a larger group of houses properties, which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs needs, and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house property for someone who has. • we have leased your house the property from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within six in 6 months. In the six 6 cases above, the sheriff Sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house property as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house property to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house property as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. : • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, subtenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, house or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff Sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warningnotice of proceedings. We will also send that written warning notice of proceedings to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; , they will also have the right to take part in the court proceedings if we know about them. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has have been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, you or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notice within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused cause alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. ; • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from for somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, within in six months. • the landlord is an island council, the house is held for education purposes, it is occupied by someone who used to be employed by the council for education purposes and now it is needed for someone else for those purposes. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff Sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-ex- wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff Sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 Act 2001 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, subtenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000Act 2001. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000Act 2001. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you You owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • youYou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the The condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, subtenant or somebody in your household. • youYou, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we We gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2) (aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the The numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we We intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the The house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the The house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we We have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we We want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful subtenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, subtenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse spouse, civil partner or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone acted in an antisocial manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction unless we are relying solely on paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 of the Act and have served the appropriate notices within 12 months of the conviction or appeal in accordance with section 16(2)(aa) of the Act in which case the Sheriff must grant an order for eviction. • You you or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) ), civil partner or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warning. We will also send that written warning to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, you or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • You, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been anti-social to anyone else in the locality vicinity, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of such a person, and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, or will end, within in six months. • the landlord is an islands council, the house is held for education purposes, it is occupied by someone who used to be employed by the council for education purposes and now it is needed for someone else for those purposes. In the six seven cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement
By Court Order. The sheriff grants an order for eviction following a request by us. You have a right to defend any legal action taken by us against you. People who live with you also have a right to be represented. We may ask for such an order under Section 14 of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000 on any of the grounds contained within Schedule 2 of the Act. Before we do so, we will first send you a written warningnotice. We will also send that written warning notice to anyone else living with you who is your spouse, co-habitee, sub-tenant, lodger, assignee, joint tenant or a member of your family aged 16 or over; if we know about them, your lawful sub-tenants, lodgers and assignees. They will also have a right to take part in the court proceedings. The following is a summary of the grounds contained within that Act and does not change the legal position contained in that Act. • you owe us rent or you have broken some other condition of this Agreement. • you, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been convicted of using the house or allowing it to be used for illegal or immoral purposes or a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment, which was committed in the house or the locality. • the condition of the house or common parts, or furniture we have supplied, has deteriorated because of the fault of you, your sub- tenant, sub-tenant or somebody in your household. • you, and your spouse or co-habitee, have been absent from the house for more than six months without good reason or you have stopped living in it as your principal home. • we gave you this tenancy as a result of false information given by you in your application for the house. • Youyou, someone residing in your house, or anyone visiting it, has been acted in an anti-social to anyone manner towards (or has harassed) someone else in the locality and it is not reasonable for us to transfer you to another house. In all the above cases, the sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to make an order for eviction. • You or someone residing in your house has been guilty of harassment, nuisance or annoyance in or in the neighbourhood of the house, or has pursued a course of conduct amounting to harassment of someone else in the locality or has continued to caused alarm or distress to someone in the locality and it is appropriate, in our opinion, to transfer you to another house. • the numbers of people in the house amount to the criminal offence of overcrowding. • we intend to demolish or carry out substantial work to your house (or the building in which it is located) within a reasonable time and that work cannot be done if you are still living there. • the house has been designed or adapted for people with special needs and no one in your household has such special needs but we require the house for someone who has. • the house is part of a larger group of houses which have been designed or adapted or located near facilities for people with special needs and no-one in your household has those needs but we require the house for someone who has. • we have leased your house from somebody else and that lease has ended, ended or will end, end within six months. In the six cases above, the sheriff must grant an order for eviction if we also offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. • we want to transfer the house to your husband or wife (or ex- ex-husband or ex-wife) or co-co- habitee, where one of you no longer wishes to live with the other. In this case, we will offer you a suitable alternative house as defined by Schedule 2 (Part 2) of the Housing (Scotland) Xxx 0000. The sheriff must also be satisfied that it is reasonable to grant the order. OR.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Scottish Secure Tenancy Agreement