An Employer, Master, Licensor, or Principal can use an Unlawful Detainer to evict an employee or servant.
You have to file in The Superior Court of California. This is the only court with the power to hear the case. Every county in California has a Superior Court. Many counties have several branches. Make sure you eFile
the action and list the right branch of the right county (called venue).
Venue means the county where a court with jurisdiction can hear a lawsuit. For an Unlawful Detainer, the venue is the county where the property is. The Superior Court of Orange County has several branches called “Justice Centers.” You must eFile/eDeliver/eFax your case and list the correct Justice Center where the property is located.
The plaintiff is the person who starts the Unlawful Detainer. In most cases the plaintiff is the landlord. The plaintiff has to be competent and over 18. They have to be able to state that the property is theirs. An agent, such as a property manager, cannot sue in his or her own name.
You can be a landlord even if you do not own the property. For example, if you sublet the property or part of the property, you are the subtenant’s landlord. You can start an Unlawful Detainer against the subtenant. Also, if the owner lets a management company give out leases in its own name, the management company is the landlord. The management company can start an Unlawful Detainer action. But, if the lease is in the owner’s name, the management company is not the landlord. The owner is the plaintiff.
If the plaintiff is a corporation, they must be represented by an attorney.
The person or people the plaintiff wants to evict is the defendant. The defendant must live on the property when you file. Try to name all of the adults who live at the property as defendants. It can be hard to enforce the judgment against anyone who is not named in the complaint as a defendant. You do not have to name children under 18 as defendants. You can also add unknown defendants by checking the box “DOES” and entering “DOES 1 to (insert a number such as 10 or 100),” etc.
This has to do with how much damages you ask for in the final section of the complaint. If you ask for more than $25,000 in damages, the case is a “General Civil” Case. If you ask for less, it is a “Limited Civil” case. You have to state if you are asking for more or less than $10,000.
Interests and costs do not count as damages. For example, in a limited civil case, you can get:
Most Unlawful Detainers about residences are Limited Civil actions. Usually they are not for more than $10,000. Refer to the amount that you put on your Eviction Notice.
The complaint has to identify who or what the plaintiff is.
For example, the plaintiff could be a:
Defendant is Using the Property:
The complaint has to include the address of the property. Or it has to give its legal description. The complaint also has to state that the defendant is using the property right now.
Plaintiff’s Standing:
The complaint has to include how the plaintiff is connected with the property.
For example, if the plaintiff is a:
The Relationship between the Plaintiff and Defendant:
The complaint has to state what relationship the plaintiff and defendant have. The relationship is the basis for the action. Most Unlawful Detainer actions are about a landlord-tenant relationship.
But there are other relationships that can be the basis for an Unlawful Detainer:
The complaint also has to state how the relationship started. For example, in a landlord-tenant relationship, the complaint can state:
Facts That Support an Unlawful Detainer:
The complaint has to give facts that prove the defendant is staying on the property illegally. For a landlord-tenant case, the complaint has to explain how the lease ended.
If the landlord canceled the lease, the complaint has to:
If there is rent control or eviction control, the complaint has to state that the plaintiff followed those laws. If the property is a mobile home or a mobile home park or government subsidized housing, then the complaint has to state that the plaintiff followed the special laws, called statutes, for those places.
Facts That Support Money Damages:
An Unlawful Detainer action is about who gets to stay on the property. But you can also ask for money.
In general, you can only ask for money for:
If you ask for general damages, you have to state what the daily fair rental value is. This means how much you could rent the property for on the 1st day the defendant stayed illegally. In landlord-tenant cases, this is the day the lease ended or was canceled. It should be close to 1/30 of one month’s rent.
When there is a judgment against the defendant, the court calculates the damages. They multiply the daily fair rental value by the number of days the defendant stayed illegally until the judgment.
Figuring out how to properly complete the complaint may be complicated. The cost of an Unlawful Detainer Assistant may be cheaper than the additional rent and damages you lose if your case is delayed or dismissed for a legal defect.
Go to the Filing & Serving An Unlawful Detainer Complaint page.