Summary Proceedings
Landlord - Tenant cases
A landlord may file a summary proceeding (landlord-tenant case) to recover possession of premises and/or to obtain a money judgment. A person who is renting a home, apartment, mobile home, or some other building from someone, is a tenant. A landlord is the person who is renting the home, apartment, mobile home, or some building. Both the tenant and the landlord have legal rights.
The 70th District Court handles a variety of cases involving problems between landlords and tenants. A tenant can be evicted from the property for failure to pay rent, termination of tenancy, health hazard termination, destruction of property and refusal to follow rules and regulations. For a further discussion please visit the State Court Administrators web site. Click here.
Land Contract Forfeiture cases
An owner of property who is selling that property to another on a land contract may file a summary proceeding to forfeit the buyer's interest in the property and regain possession. The procedures for a land contract forfeiture are similar to landlord tenant cases. A buyer may be evicted from the premises after forfeiture of the property for violating terms of the contract such as non-payment of installment payments, or taxes, or failure to maintain insurance. For a further discussion of the procedures used, visit the State Court Administrators web site. Click here.
Fees
| Possession only |
$ 45.00
|
| Claims up to $600.00 |
$ 25.00
|
| Claims $600.01 to $1,750.00 |
$ 45.00
|
| Claims $1,750.01 to $10,000.00 |
$ 65.00
|
| Claims $10,000.01 to 25,000.00 |
$ 150.00
|
| Motion fee |
$ 20.00
|
Landlord - Tenant Forms
Forms for landlord tenant cases are available on the Forms page of this web site.
Notice: A corporation must be represented by an attorney. If the property is owned by a corporation, the owner may not appear in Court to present the case. Michigan law specifically prohibits a non-lawyer from representing the corporation in Court.