• FreeAdvice has a new Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, effective May 25, 2018.
    By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our Terms of Service and use of cookies.

Former tenants never forwarded their mail - can I be held liable?

Accident - Bankruptcy - Criminal Law / DUI - Business - Consumer - Employment - Family - Immigration - Real Estate - Tax - Traffic - Wills   Please click a topic or scroll down for more.

~aria~

Junior Member
What is the name of your state? California

I can't find a better place to put this, so I'm sorry if this is the incorrect location.

We moved to this townhouse a few months ago, but the former tenants never forwarded their mail. We've received everything from magazine to their W2s (you can kind of tell by looking at it), government mail, business tax envelopes, credit card statements, and letters from their child's Montessori school. Basically with what's been sent to us, if we were dishonest people, we'd have all the information on them to ruin their lives. So I don't know why the hell they haven't forwarded anything.

We've received so much of it we printed sticky labels to save time writing, "Return to sender, intended recipient no longer at this address." But we'll still receive future mailings. I thought that maybe the Montessori school would have contacted them to ask for an updated address, but we still receive regular mailings from them. So we're presuming that these people are still claiming this address.

And we're getting tired of it. It's been months. We're spending money to return their mail for labels and ink (ink cartridges ain't cheap, folk, and the labels aren't free), time when we've had to take packages down to the post office to return them, etc.. The post office says they don't have authorization to send the mail anywhere else without a forward card, and so much deliver all mail. We can return what's not ours.

We're tired of feeling like we're responsible for other people's lives. Really, with what has been delivered to us.... If we were to just start shredding it and throwing it away, could that be seen as tampering with mail? Could they later come back and successfully sue us (anyone can sue, winning is a different matter) if we were to destroy something that ends up being important enough that they wanted it?

What are our LEGAL options for what to do with this mail? After so long, I'm starting to wonder if it's not abandoned. If we were to just throw it away, could we end up in any legal hot water? The rental office isn't sure what to do either, though they've been aware of this problem since a few weeks after we moved in and mentioned it to them.

Thank you in advance.
 


xylene

Senior Member
Befriend you postal employee.

Leave a note with for your postman.

Say, hi were your new customer. We're the "MR. NEW TENANT"

Thanks so much for your hard work!

We get a lot of mail that isn't ours here. Its For "MR. OLD TENANT"
And we really want to make sure it gets delivered.


Enclose a 5 dollar bill with note.

90% of it will stop.

Use a pen on the mail for the rest. No need for labels.
 

seniorjudge

Senior Member
Good luck.

When I moved, only the telephone company moved at lightning speed to change my address...11 months.

The other folks were pretty slow!

:rolleyes:
 

~aria~

Junior Member
xylene and jetx, we are tired of dealing with it. xylene, I've even been to the post office. They said they have to deliver, that we can put it back in the mail, but they have to deliver. jetx, we shouldn't be getting it at all and it's annoying having to label or write on at least three or four pieces of mail every single day, sometimes more, and having to go to the post offices to take back packages left at the door.

Can we legally just throw it away as it's been several months? Clearly they don't care enough to forward anything.
 

FlyingRon

Senior Member
No you can't throw it away. Do as suggested previously. Give it back to the USPS and let them take care of it. They have procedures for such things.
 

xylene

Senior Member
xylene, I've even been to the post office.
I didn't say anything about the post office.

I said to leave a kind note to your postal carrier. (and leave a tip) ;)

It will very likely work. Carriers remember people who tip. The carrier will scrawl "Return to sender" on the mail that isn't yours and drop it back in the slot.

Tipping your mail man is a key way to ensure that you get that 'old fashioned' service they don't have to give everyone.
 

Find the Right Lawyer for Your Legal Issue!

Fast, Free, and Confidential
data-ad-format="auto">
Top