Call Now: 601-688-4110

Lease problem, eviction, or deposit fight? Start with the facts.

Request a Mississippi landlord-tenant review. Share whether you are a landlord or tenant, what notice or court papers exist, and when the next deadline or hearing is.

Bud Sheppard, Attorney Submitting this form does not create an attorney-client relationship. If a hearing is already set, call the firm directly.

Landlord-Tenant Review

Use this guided review for evictions, unlawful detainers, lease enforcement, security deposits, habitability problems, lockouts, property damage, and related disputes.

Review starts here Answer the first questions so the firm can identify the dispute type, role, property, and deadline.
  • No flags yet

What kind of landlord-tenant matter is this?
What documents or deadlines exist?
Check anything you have. Lease terms, notices, ledgers, photos, and court papers usually matter most.
Urgency flags help the firm spot hearings, lockouts, safety issues, and appeal deadlines.
Where should the firm follow up?
Step 1 of 3: start with the facts that route the review.
1

Basic Facts

You share the role, property, dispute type, notice date, and court status.

2

Document Check

The firm identifies the lease, notice, court, and deadline details needed for review.

3

Attorney Follow-up

If the matter fits the firm, Bud or the office follows up about consultation terms and next steps.

Property disputes often turn on paper, dates, and possession.

Landlord-tenant matters can move quickly once notices or court papers are served. The lease, notice date, court date, rent ledger, communications, and property photos can decide the first practical step.

A focused review helps the firm understand whether the issue is pre-suit, already in court, or time-sensitive because of a hearing, lockout, safety concern, or judgment deadline.

Your role

Landlord, tenant, property manager, and guarantor issues are reviewed differently.

The paper trail

Leases, notices, ledgers, photos, repair records, and texts help show what happened and when.

The court posture

A pre-suit issue is different from a filed eviction, scheduled hearing, or judgment deadline.

The immediate risk

Possession, safety, utilities, property damage, and missed deadlines can change the urgency.

Do not ignore notices or court papers.

If you have an eviction hearing, judgment, lockout, safety issue, or deadline within the next week, call 601-688-4110. Submitting a form does not pause a court deadline.

Start Property Review