Member
| There can't be mandamus against your constable for failure to engage the services of a bonded warehouse, since use of a bonded warehouse to store items of personal property removed under a writ of possession is "at the officer's discretion". Tex. Prop. Code sec. 24.0061(e). Mandamus does not lie to compel a discretionary act. As far as who removes the property, your county's practice appears to be correct under the statute. Specifically, the writ itself is statutorily required to command the officer to "instruct the tenant to remove or to allow the landlord, the landlord's representatives, or other persons acting under the officer's supervision to remove all personal property from the rental unit othern than personal property claimed to be owned by the landlord[.]" Tex. Prop. Code sec. 24.0061(d)(2)(C). The only statutory restriction on where the property is placed after removal is that it cannot block a public sidewalk, passageway or street and it cannot be placed outside while it is raining, sleeting or snowing. Id. at (d)(2)(D). That may not prevent the filing of a mandamus (since all it takes to file a lawsuit is a little over $200 and a bad attitude), but your position appears to be solidly defensible. |
| Posts: 1233 | Location: Amarillo, Texas, USA | Registered: March 15, 2001 |
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| I'd like to follow up on Julie's question with regard to who is responsible for removing personal property from the rental unit -- the landlord or the constable? Julie indicated that it has been the practice in her jurisdiction for the constable to supervise the landlord's removal of the property from the rental unit. That has also been the practice here. But recently some landlords have taken the position that they are not required to remove the property from the rental unit. If the landlord refuses to remove the property (and the tenant fails or refuses to remove it), is the constable required to remove it? Or can the constable simply remove the tenant from the premises and allow the landlord to take possession of the premises with the personal property still inside? |
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