When hard times hit. No one ever wants to find them-self in a court house under eviction. But please no that there are things you can do to slow down the process and get yourself a little more time.
Beware of people in the courtroom that promise to help you for a couple hundred dollars. This is something you can do yourself for free.
Appealing as pauper
If you are unable to post an appeal or cash bond, and pay court
costs, you still may appeal your eviction case to county court by filing
an affidavit of inability and appeal the case as a pauper. The deadline
for filing the affidavit is the same as appealing using an appeal or
cash bond (five days from the judgment counting weekends).
If the court accepts your affidavit and the landlord does not
challenge it, then you can appeal the case without posting a bond or
paying costs. However, a landlord can file a protest with the J.P. court
and require you to attend a hearing to provide testimony of your
financial situation. If the court agrees with your landlord, the judge
may require you to post a bond and pay costs to appeal the eviction
(this decision can independently be appealed to the county court).
IMPORTANT NOTE: If you are appealing an eviction case that was filed
because of nonpayment of rent and you are appealing as a pauper by
filing an affidavit of inability, then within five days of filing your
affidavit you must deposit one rental payment with the J.P. court, and
in the future continue to pay regular rental payments into the county
court registry within five days of the due date under the lease. If you
do not comply, you could be removed from the premises while your appeal
is pending.
Don't get scammed by tricky people saying than can get you an extension. Unless you can afford an attorney I recommend that you Google the procedure for eviction in Texas.
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