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Eviction Defense in Burbank, Los Angeles | Tenant Attorney

Tenant-only practice. The Law Office of Zak Fisher represents tenants in California eviction matters. We do not represent landlords against tenants.

Burbank is a mid-density Los Angeles County city with single-family rentals, duplexes, triplexes, and 1970s-and-newer apartment buildings, and a steady eviction caseload in the Burbank Courthouse. If you are facing eviction or a notice that looks like the start of one, the rules that govern your tenancy depend on your building, your jurisdiction, and the type of notice. This page covers what Burbank tenants should know about local tenant protections, common defense angles, and what to do if the response clock is already running.

Which laws apply to Burbank tenancies

Burbank sits within City of Burbank (no local rent stabilization ordinance). The applicable rent stabilization framework is no local rent stabilization or just-cause ordinance, so statewide AB 1482 is the primary tenant protection framework. AB 1482 statewide rules govern most non-exempt residential tenancies, including rent-cap limits and just-cause termination requirements. Determining which framework applies to a specific unit is the first step in any defense, because the available defenses, notice requirements, and just-cause rules differ depending on which set governs.

If the building’s rent stabilization registration is lapsed or has never been filed, the landlord may be barred from prosecuting the eviction in the first place under cases like Floystrup v. Lakeside Square. Registration lapse is often the cleanest procedural defense available, and it is widely under-discovered by tenants in propria persona.

Common eviction patterns in Burbank

What we see most in Burbank cases: AB 1482 just-cause violations, single-family-exemption disputes where LLC ownership defeats the exemption, defective 60-day notices. None of these is a generic defense. Each requires looking at the specific building, the specific notice, and the specific paper trail. A 60-day notice in an RSO building usually fails because RSO requires a recognized just cause. A 3-day notice to pay or quit that overstates rent under Bevill v. Zoura is fatally defective. An LLC named on the notice without authority to sue can support a motion to quash.

The 10-court-day Answer deadline applies the same everywhere

One thing that does not change by neighborhood: the statewide AB 2347 deadline. Effective January 1, 2025, Code of Civil Procedure section 1167 gives tenants 10 court days from service to file an Answer, demurrer, or motion to quash. Weekends and court holidays do not count. Missing this deadline triggers a default judgment unless you move quickly to set aside under CCP section 473. Filing on time keeps every defense alive.

If you have already been served, the Just Served playbook walks through the first 24 hours. The 10-court-day Answer deadline page covers the exact day-count rule.

Where Burbank cases go in court

Burbank unlawful detainer cases typically route to Burbank Courthouse. Different UD departments run different settlement conference and discovery practices. Some departments push for early settlement conferences. Others move cases to trial quickly. Knowing the venue matters because it changes the calendar pressure and the settlement leverage.

What to do if you are in the response window

If you have been served with a summons and unlawful detainer complaint, the response window starts the day after service. The most leveraged thing you can do is file an Answer or motion within the 10-court-day deadline. Do not wait to see what happens. Do not assume the landlord will work it out. Once a default judgment is entered, even the cleanest defenses get harder to assert. If the deadline is already close, the Just Served playbook tells you the first steps, and a tenant defense attorney can take over from there.

Related pages

The Law Office of Zak Fisher represents tenants only in California eviction matters. We do not represent landlords against tenants. This page is general legal information for Burbank renters, not legal advice for any specific matter. No attorney-client relationship is formed without a signed engagement letter.

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