When family and business mix, things can get messy. A man, who had kindly allowed his brother to live in one of his rental properties, found himself in a heated conflict when his brother started making changes to the house without permission. After several arguments and late rent payments, the man decided to sell the house, leaving his brother and his family in a tight spot. Was this a cold-hearted move, or a justified response to a difficult situation? Let’s dive into the story.
Helping a Brother Out

The Agreement

Hot Water Tank Troubles

A Heated Argument

No More Changes ❌

Wiring Woes ⚡

Rent Troubles

Selling the House ️

Eviction Notice

The Mortgage Argument

Late Rent Excuse

Family Sides

Parents’ Opinion

Feeling Bad

Family Feud: Who’s in the Wrong?
In a whirlwind of family drama, a man found himself at odds with his brother after selling the house his brother’s family was living in. The siblings clashed over home improvements and late rent payments, leading to the surprise eviction notice. While some family members sided with the brother, others, including their parents, supported the man’s decision. With emotions running high and relationships strained, was this a harsh move or a necessary step to protect his own interests? Let’s see what the internet thinks of this situation…
NTA. You were kind, but he took advantage. ♂️

Generous landlord turned AH for not notifying brother about selling

ESH. Brother took advantage, OP evicted without notice.

“YTA for not giving him a heads up”

ESH. Landlord expects unreasonable upgrades, brother tries to improve property.

ESH. Informing vs. subsidizing. Brother sucks for mentioned reasons.

NTA, but your parents are right. Karma strikes again!

“YTA. Not for selling the house, but for not even giving him a heads up.”

Mixing business and family can lead to messy situations

YTA for evicting your brother without even telling him.

Both parties are a**holes for their unreasonable behavior. ♂️

ESH, but you’re worse. Scummy move without basic courtesy

Heartless eviction leaves family homeless. YTA for lack of empathy.

Tenant questions landlord’s claims about the condition of the house.

“YTA. Evicting a family with kids like that is shitty even when they aren’t related to you.”

YTA for being a heartless landlord. Family should come first.

Family feud: NTA evicts brother, sparks heated debate

No sympathy for landlords? Let’s dive into the debate!
