Landlord uncle evicts niece from her apartment because she invited her boyfriend over against his wishes: 'It does say in the lease that absolutely no one is allowed over.'

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  • Woman in black long sleeve shirt sitting on gray couch
  • Am I the bad guy for thinking my landlord (uncle) is unfair for kicking me out for having my boyfriend over?

    Sorry this is long, but there's a lot of context. I (22F) and my brother (19M) rent a house from our uncle.
  • It's just the two of us on the lease. Our uncle does NOT live with us.
  • The same day we signed the lease, our uncle told us that another woman would be living with us "to keep an eye on us." This was not discussed beforehand.
  • She moved some stuff in but never actually slept there. Eventually, her daughter started living there instead, without my uncle knowing.
  • As far as he knows, the original woman lived there the whole time. While the daughter lived there, she constantly ate the food my brother and I bought with our own money and my EBT.
  • She never bought groceries and kept eating our food even after we told her not to.
  • Asian young happy attractive woman eats green salad in kitchen at home beautiful girl feel joyful and enjoy eating vegetables healthy foods
  • Sometimes the mother would come over and eat our food too. A few weeks later, my uncle told me he was kicking the woman out because she couldn't pay rent.
  • After that, I told him the truth about how her daughter had been living there instead.
  • I didn't say anything until I knew they were already getting kicked out. When we moved in, my uncle said we were NOT allowed to have friends over, no boyfriends or girlfriends.
  • I admit I broke that rule and had my boyfriend over sometimes. The woman living there knew and didn't care at all, she actually liked him.
  • My brother also had his girlfriend over. After the woman and her daughter were kicked out, they told my uncle that I had my boyfriend over.
  • A man sitting on top of a black couch
  • They did NOT mention my brother having his girlfriend over. Now my uncle is kicking me out too, but not my brother.
  • I know I technically broke a rule, but it feels unfair that only I'm being punished, especially since we're both adults paying rent.
  • My uncle's reasoning is that he doesn't believe in sex before marriage, which is his religious belief, not mine.
  • I don't really have anywhere else to go except renting a room or moving in with my boyfriend, but we've only been dating 10 months and I don't feel ready for that.
  • My brother is basically my only close family member and friend, and it hurts that I'm being forced out while he gets to stay.
  • I feel sad, betrayed, and confused. I know I messed up, but this whole situation feels unreasonable and targeted.
  • So... AITA for thinking this is unfair and overreacting? EDIT: I live in California, San Bernardino County, and yes, it does say in the lease, absolutely no one is allowed over, and our mother and other brother have to leave by 9pm.
  • As far as my brother who I live with... idk I would never snitch on him or anything, I'd rather just keep things to myself rather than risk him getting kicked out.
  • I think he feels overwhelmed by this and probably doesn't really know what to do, as to why he hasn't done or said anything to my uncle regarding all of this.
  • I have also been looking up tenant rights in my area and it says "California tenants have a right to quiet enjoyment of the rental.
  • That includes having reasonable guests, including romantic partners."
  • Dirtyevilyahud Why didn't you just say they were lying? They already lied about the living situation...
  • Herbscrystalsandcats NTA. Also you'll have to check the laws in your state but do you have a lease
  • Zestyclose_Note105 Original Poster's Reply yes i do, its my first time renting so i dont really know what to do
  • Key_Seat_9044 NTA. 1) You're a grown ass adult. 2)He doesn't have the right to force his beliefs on anyone. 3) Your personal life is none of his business. 4)You're literally PAYING him. As long as you didn't damage the property or do something actually bad I don't see him legally being able to kick you out.
  • onitshaanambra What state are you in? Google landlord and tenant rights in your state. You have a written lease, and your landlord doesn't live with you, so legally he can't kick you out without notice.
  • vilogrim NTA. A landlord may not prohibit visitors. It's illegal.
  • Andrea Venturii NTA. You are 22 years old and paying rent. He is your landlord, not your warden. He has no right to ban visitors or force a surprise roommate on you "to watch you." That is actually illegal in most places. It feels unfair because it IS unfair. He is treating you like a child instead of a paying tenant. Honestly, getting kicked out might be a blessing in disguise because he sounds like a nightmare to rent from.
  • Castle_of_Aaaaaaargh NTA Trchnically you broke rules, but going beyind that.. the level of contril and having family force their personal values on you is too extreme and unreasonable. You and your brother are close. You both lived there and both broke the rules together. Why not suggest he moves out too and you both search together? Morally, i couldnt imagine watching my sister get kicked out and i sit quietly, savdd by thr fact a vengeful ex-roomie chose to spill the beans on my sibling but no
  • Rredhead926 As others have said, he probably can't legally kick you out. NTA
  • West-Resource-1604 Well he cannot 'kick you out.' He has to evict you. And that'll take up to a year to get a court hearing. Then he has to win the case. Keep paying rent. Zelle it to him preferably so you can establish a paper trail.

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