Learn the ten basic steps to file a "formal" eviction case, including how to set a "show cause" hearing at the start of your case where you can ask the judge for a "temporary writ of restitution" to get possession of the property.
CAUTION! Unless your tenant has surrendered or abandoned possession of the rental property, you must file an eviction case in order to remove the tenant! (NRS 118A.480.) If you lock the tenant out of the property, use force or threats to remove the tenant, or terminate the tenant's utilities or services, you could be sued by the tenant and punished by the court.
Each of the ten steps is discussed below.
To learn more about formal evictions, click to visit Overview of the “Formal” Process and Choosing the Summary or Formal Process. To see how the formal eviction process works, click on the following flowchart:
TIP! You may need to hire an attorney. A “formal” eviction is a civil case, which means a property manager or agent CANNOT file documents with the court or appear in court for the property owner. The owner must represent him or herself or hire an attorney. If the property owner is a business (like a corporation or an LLC), it will absolutely need to hire a lawyer because those businesses cannot represent themselves in court. The "formal" eviction process can be complicated. If you’re not familiar with court procedure and the eviction process, hire a lawyer! Click to visit Lawyers and Legal Help.
If you are filing a “formal” eviction case because a “summary” eviction was denied, you may have already served the tenant with an eviction notice. If the notice was valid and properly served, you can file a formal case without serving another notice to the tenant. If you have already served a valid notice, click to skip to Step 3.
If you have not yet served a notice, all formal eviction cases start with a notice to the tenant. The type of notice the landlord gives depends on why the landlord is trying to evict the tenant. Grounds for eviction include:
Click the above links for forms and more information or click to visit Eviction & Housing Forms.
CAUTION! If you're trying to evict a tenant or a former owner after the foreclosure sale of a residential property, click to visit Eviction Issues Related to Foreclosure. If you're trying to evict a tenant who rents a mobile home lot, there are different notices that apply. Click to visit Mobile Homes.
All eviction notices must be "served" (delivered to the tenant) by a constable, sheriff, licensed process server, or agent of an attorney licensed in Nevada, in one of the three following ways:
The Nevada statute that governs service of eviction notices (NRS 40.280) allows service of a notice by method number 2 above (leaving the notice with a person of suitable age at the rental property and mailing a copy to the tenant) only if the tenant "is absent from his place of residence." Method number 3 above (posting the notice on the rental property and mailing a copy to the tenant) is only permitted when "a person of suitable age or discretion cannot be found" at the rental property. Personal service of the notice to the tenant by method number 1 above is always permitted.
CAUTION! If you're trying to evict a tenant or a former owner after the foreclosure sale of a residential property, there are unique notice requirements. Click to read Evicting a Tenant After Foreclosure or Evicting a Former-Owner After Foreclosure.
Before the court can issue a summary eviction order, the landlord must file the following proofs of service with the court:
If you want the constable in your township to prepare and serve the eviction notice for you, contact your local constable's office to make arrangements and obtain fee information. Click to visit Constables & Sheriffs.
If the tenant complied with the eviction notice (by paying rent, remedying the lease violation, or moving, for example), you might not need to proceed with the eviction. If the tenant did not comply with the eviction notice, you can prepare and file a Complaint for Unlawful Detainer and have the clerk issue a Summons to begin a formal eviction case. (NRS 40.300 to 40.425.)
TIP! Before you file a complaint, you must decide what court to file in. If you're seeking money damages of $10,000 or less, file in the justice court for the township where the property is located. If you're seeking money damages above $10,000, file in the Eighth Judicial District Court. Click to visit Justice Court or District Court to learn more.
Forms for a Summons, Complaint for Unlawful Detainer, and Civil Court Cover Sheet are available, free of charge, at the Self-Help Center. You can download the forms by clicking one of the listed formats underneath the form's title below:
FYI! These forms are designed for landlord-tenant cases filed in the justice court. If you're evicting a tenant or a former-owner after the sale or foreclosure of a residence, click to visit Evicting a Tenant After Foreclosure or Evicting a Former Owner After Foreclosure. If you’re evicting a tenant from a mobile home park, click to visit Mobile Homes.
COMPLAINT FOR UNLAWFUL DETAINER (NOT AFTER SALE)
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CIVIL COURT COVER SHEET
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To prepare and file your documents, follow these steps:
For more information, click to visit Basics of Court Forms and Filing.
If you want to evict the tenant as quickly as possible (and before trial), file an application asking the court to set a “show cause” hearing. At the hearing, you can ask the court for a Temporary Writ of Restitution, which is a court order for the tenant’s removal. (NRS 40.300(3), JCRCP 107.) To learn more, click to visit Formal Eviction Hearings and Overview of the “Formal” Process.
Most landlords want to get a temporary writ and remove the tenant quickly. But you could also skip this step and set the case for trial. A trial cannot be set less than twenty calendar days after tenant is served with the summons and complaint. (JCRCP 109(a).) For more information, click to skip to Step 10 below.
A form Application for Order to Show Cause Why a Temporary Writ of Restitution Should Not Issue (Not After Sale), which includes an Order to Show Cause, is available, free of charge, at the Civil Law Self-Help Center. You can download the form by clicking one of the listed formats underneath the form's title below:
FYI! This form is designed for landlord-tenant cases filed in the justice court. If you're evicting a tenant or a former owner after the sale or foreclosure of a residence, click to visit Evicting a Tenant After Foreclosure or Evicting a Former Owner After Foreclosure. If you’re evicting a tenant from a mobile home park, click to visit Mobile Homes.
APPLICATION FOR ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE WHY A TEMPORARY WRIT OF RESTITUTION SHOULD NOT ISSUE (NOT AFTER SALE)
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To prepare and file your application, follow these steps:
For more information, click to visit Basics of Court Forms and Filing.
Arrange to have a copy of the following documents "served" (personally delivered) to the tenant:
(You may want to staple the documents into two packets: (1) Summons and Complaint, and (2) Order and Application.)
The document packets must be served by a process server, the constable or sheriff, or any person who is not a party to the action and who is over eighteen years of age. (NRS 40.300(2), JCRCP 4.) For contact information for the sheriff or constable, click to visit Constables & Sheriffs.
TIP! Arrange for service of the documents as quickly as possible! And make sure the documents are served at least 11 calendar days before the hearing date. If they aren’t, the hearing can’t be held.
The tenant must be served personally or by leaving copies at the tenant's home with some person of suitable age and discretion (at least fourteen years old) who lives there. (JCRCP 4(a), (d)(6).)
The process server, constable, or sheriff who serves the documents must complete an affidavit or declaration of service, which must be filed with the court. (A declaration of service they can complete is part of the summons form you filed in Step 3.)
FYI! Some process servers fill out the affidavit or declaration of service and give it back to you to file with the court. Others will file it with the court themselves. Check with your process server to verify the procedure. And whatever the procedure, make sure an affidavit or declaration proving service on the tenant is on file with the court before the “show cause” hearing date!
If the judge signed the “show cause” order you submitted in Step 4, you should have received a date and time for the “show cause” hearing. To learn about what to expect and how to prepare, click to read Formal Eviction Hearings.
At the hearing, if the judge rules for you and grants a temporary writ of restitution, go to Step 7.
If the judge rules in the tenant’s favor and refuses to issue a writ, you typically have two options:
If, at the “show cause” hearing, the judge ruled in your favor and granted the temporary writ of restitution, prepare three documents: (1) Order Directing Issuance of Temporary Writ of Restitution, (2) Notice of Posting Bond for Issuance of Temporary Writ of Restitution, and (3) Temporary Writ of Restitution.
These forms are available, free of charge, at the Self-Help Center, or you can download the forms by clicking on one of the formats underneath the form’s title below:
ORDER DIRECTING ISSUANCE OF TEMPORARY WRIT OF RESTITUTION
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NOTICE OF POSTING SECURITY FOR ISSUANCE OF TEMPORARY WRIT OF RESTITUTION
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For more information, click to visit Basics of Court Forms and Filing.
When the judge granted the temporary writ in Step 6, the judge should have ordered the landlord to post “security” (money). The security is protection for the tenant. If it turns out that the tenant was wrongfully evicted, the tenant can get the security to pay for any damage the tenant suffered. (NRS 40.300(c).)
Before you can get the Temporary Writ of Restitution, you must post the security ordered by the judge with the court clerk. The clerk can typically accept cash or a bond obtained by the landlord from a bonding company (depending on what the judge ordered and the court’s practices). You must:
NOTICE OF ENTRY OF ORDER OR JUDGMENT
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If the court granted a Temporary Writ of Restitution, make arrangements with the constable in the township where the property is located to serve the writ and remove the tenant. The constables' procedures and fees for this service may vary, so make arrangements with the appropriate constable's office in advance.
You might also need to prepare instructions to the constable regarding the eviction. For an instruction form for the Las Vegas Constable, the North Las Vegas Constable, or the Henderson Constable, click on one of the listed formats underneath the appropriate form's title below:
INSTRUCTIONS TO THE CONSTABLE – EVICTIONS (LAS VEGAS)
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INSTRUCTIONS TO THE CONSTABLE – EVICTIONS (NORTH LAS VEGAS)
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INSTRUCTIONS TO THE CONSTABLE – EVICTIONS (HENDERSON)
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For an instruction form for a constable in one of the other townships in Clark County, visit that constable's website or contact that constable's office directly. Click to visit Constables & Sheriffs for contact information
Once the constable evicts the tenant, evaluate whether you want to dismiss your case or pursue it.
For most landlords, the primary goal is to evict the tenant. Once the tenant is gone, most landlords have little interest in taking the case to trial. Understandably so. Trial can be extremely time-consuming and stressful. Unlike the “show cause” hearing (or a summary eviction hearing or a small claims hearing that you might have attended), the court’s rules and procedures at trial are more formal and more complicated. A trial, you will need to:
And probably the biggest factor weighing against going to trial: The tenant has the right to request a jury! That means you could end up making opening and closing statements, examining witnesses, and conducting the whole trial in front of an audience!
Some things to consider when deciding whether to go forward with your case are:
Is the rent money the tenant owes worth the time, stress, and aggravation of going to trial?
Do you have the time to devote to preparing for and conducting a trial?
Are you willing to put the time and effort into collecting the judgment if you win? The court does not collect the judgment for you. You will need to prepare and file a number of court documents.
If you win and get a judgment, what are the chances of ever collecting the money? Does the tenant have a job and make enough money to be garnished? Is the tenant’s income protected by law? (Social security, disability income, veterans’ benefits, and many other types of governmental payments cannot be taken to satisfy a judgment.)
Are you comfortable presenting your witnesses, arguments, and evidence to the judge in a formal courtroom setting, or will you be too nervous?
If the tenant requests a jury trial, will you be able to present your case effectively with a large group of people watching you?
Will you be able to think on your feet and make strategic legal decisions without help? (The judge must remain neutral, so she cannot coach, coax, or assist you. The tenant’s attorney is on the other side of the case and will not help you.)
Can you live with the chance that you could mess up the case, lose, and get nothing?
If you decide not to go to trial, you can wait thirty days and voluntarily dismiss your case. (JCRLV 43.5.) After a dismissal, the court will automatically return the bond that you posted. (JCRLV 43.5.)
How you dismiss your case depends on whether the tenant has filed an answer in the case.
NOTICE OF VOLUNTARY DISMISSAL OF CIVIL ACTION
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If you decide to go to trial, file a Notice of Trial Setting. (Check with the justice court for the township where your case if filed to learn the court’s procedure for scheduling trials and to obtain a trial setting form if one is available.) A trial cannot be set less than twenty calendar days after tenant is served with the summons and complaint. (JCRCP 109(a).)
Read the Justice Court Rules of Civil Procedure to learn what you will need to do to prepare for trial. The Nevada Civil Practice Manual will also be a great resource.