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You came home to a notice on your door. Or a process server handed you papers at work. It says something like "Notice to Quit," "Pay or Vacate," or "Unlawful Detainer." The deadlines feel impossibly short — sometimes just 3 days. And if you don't understand what you're reading, the consequences can be catastrophic.

In Salt Lake County, a significant portion of eviction cases are filed by a small number of high-volume law firms and services that specialize in representing large landlords and property management companies. These operations are sometimes called "eviction mills" — they process hundreds or thousands of eviction cases per year, often using streamlined, standardized procedures designed to move tenants out as quickly as possible.

If you are on the receiving end of one of these actions, you need to understand exactly what is happening and how much time you have. This is not the time to wait and see.

How Utah's Eviction Process Works

In Utah, evicting a tenant is called an "unlawful detainer" action. Before a landlord can file in court, they must first give you a written notice. The length of that notice depends on the reason for eviction:

3 Business Day Notice to Pay or Vacate: For unpaid rent. You have 3 business days (excluding weekends and holidays) to pay the full amount owed or leave. If you pay in full within that window, the eviction cannot proceed. Utah Code § 78B-6-802(1)(c).

3 Calendar Day Notice (Nuisance, Waste, Criminal Activity): For serious violations such as waste or damage to the property, unauthorized subletting, operating an unlawful business on the premises, nuisance, or criminal activity. These notices typically offer no option to cure — the landlord demands you leave within 3 calendar days. Utah Code § 78B-6-802(1)(d)–(g).

5-Day Notice (Tenancy at Will): If you have no written lease, you may receive a 5-day notice to vacate. Utah Code § 78B-6-802.

15-Day Notice (Periodic Tenancy Termination): To end a month-to-month tenancy, the landlord must give at least 15 calendar days' notice before the end of the rental period. Utah Code § 78B-6-802(1)(b).

Once the notice period expires, the landlord can file an unlawful detainer lawsuit in district court. From that point, the process moves very fast.

How fast? Faster than most people realize.

Once an unlawful detainer is filed in Utah, a hearing can be scheduled within as little as 10 days. If you don't show up, or don't file a proper response, the court can enter judgment against you — meaning you lose your home — without ever hearing your side of the story.

High-volume eviction firms count on tenants not knowing the deadlines, not showing up, or not understanding that they have valid defenses. Many evictions succeed by default.

High-Volume Eviction Operations in Salt Lake County

If you've received a notice or been served with a lawsuit, check the name of the law firm or service on the paperwork. In Salt Lake County, high-volume eviction work is concentrated among a small number of operations. Being aware of them can help you understand what you're dealing with.

Titan Legal (formerly Kirk Cullimore Law)

Self-described as "Utah's #1 eviction and collection attorneys," Titan Legal represents over 1,000 properties across the state and dozens of large property management companies. They have lobbied actively for stronger unlawful detainer statutes. If their name is on your paperwork, you are dealing with a highly systematized eviction operation with deep experience in Utah courts.

LeBaron & Jensen, P.C. / "Kick'em Out Quick®"

Operating under the registered trademark "Kick'em Out Quick," LeBaron & Jensen services Salt Lake and Davis County. The branding is not subtle about their purpose. They offer flat-fee eviction services to landlords and operate with high volume and speed as core selling points.

Utah Attorney Eviction Services / Carr | Woodall

Based in South Jordan, this eviction-focused subsidiary of a larger firm offers flat-fee evictions to landlords throughout the Salt Lake Valley. Their pricing structure ($650 flat fee plus court costs) is designed for volume, not complexity.

Utah Eviction Law / Utah Eviction

Several overlapping services and websites — including utahevictionlaw.com and utaheviction.com — offer landlords streamlined eviction processing, form preparation, and legal representation. If your notice or lawsuit came from one of these services, you are in a high-volume pipeline.

Important: Identifying a firm as high-volume does not mean their filings are automatically invalid or improper. What it means is that they are experienced, fast-moving, and well-resourced — and that you need representation or at minimum immediate legal advice to level the playing field.

Defenses Tenants Often Don't Know They Have

Even when you owe rent or have violated a lease, there may be valid defenses that affect the outcome of your case. These include:

Improper notice. The notice must be served correctly, contain specific required language, and give you the legally required number of days. Notices that are defective — wrong amount stated, improper service, insufficient time — can be challenged.

Landlord's failure to maintain habitable conditions. Utah law requires landlords to maintain rental properties in a habitable condition. In some cases, a landlord's failure to make repairs can be raised as a defense or counterclaim in an eviction.

Retaliation. If you exercised a legal right — such as complaining to a housing authority or asking for repairs — and the eviction followed shortly after, you may have a retaliation defense.

Discrimination. Evictions motivated by a tenant's race, religion, national origin, disability, familial status, or other protected characteristics violate federal and state fair housing laws.

Payment accepted after notice. If a landlord accepted rent after issuing a notice to pay or vacate, it may have waived the right to proceed with the eviction on that notice.

Procedural errors in the lawsuit. High-volume operations file a lot of cases. Errors in filings, service of process, and court procedures are more common than people expect and can affect the validity of the case.

What You Should Do Right Now

If you've received a notice or been served with an unlawful detainer lawsuit, do the following immediately:

1. Read every word of the paperwork and note all dates. When was the notice issued? When does it expire? When were you served with the lawsuit? These dates control your deadlines.

2. Do not move out yet. Receiving a notice is not the same as losing your home. You have legal rights throughout this process. Moving out prematurely may waive some of them and gives up your housing before you have to.

3. Do not ignore court filings. If a lawsuit has been filed, you have a deadline to respond. Missing it means a default judgment and a writ of restitution — an order allowing the constable to remove you and your belongings.

4. Contact an attorney or legal aid immediately. Utah Legal Services (utahlegalservices.org) offers free help to qualifying tenants. If you don't qualify for free legal aid, a private attorney consultation is worth the cost when your home is at stake.

Facing Eviction in Salt Lake County?

Jim Tily offers free consultations for tenants facing eviction. Don't lose your home by missing a deadline or not knowing your rights. Call today.

(801) 641-0883 Send a Message

This article is for informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Information about law firms is based on publicly available sources including their own websites. The identification of a firm as high-volume is descriptive, not a statement of improper conduct. Contact an attorney to evaluate your specific situation.