Landlord-tenant timing can be modeled as a classroom notice clock. Honesty note: simplified property interests model; jurisdictions and recording systems vary; the pinned first step states the as-of date; not legal advice.

highlighted = computed this step

Property model honesty note

Honesty note: simplified property interests model; jurisdictions and recording systems vary; as of June 24, 2026; not legal advice; code encodes a stated structural model, not the law itself.

property model as of June24,2026\text{property model as of }June 24, 2026

Use a stated notice clock

The stated classroom model uses a toy landlord-tenant notice clock. It is scheduling data, not housing advice.

toy notice clock\text{toy notice clock}

Example trigger data

The toy trigger date is April 1, 2026. The stated clock adds 10 calendar days.

days=10\text{days}=10

The table recomputes the review date

The deadline table excludes the trigger day and produces review date April 11, 2026 from the authored count rule.

review date=April11,2026\text{review date}=April 11, 2026

Diagram note

The diagram is a toy notice clock. It does not select a landlord, tenant, filing, or possession outcome.

computed clock only\text{computed clock only}

Jurisdiction: US; as of 2026-06-24; not legal advice; Code encodes the stated structural model, not the law itself.

Simplified landlord tenant notice clock deadline=2026-04-11 2026-04-02: counted count=1 2026-04-03: counted count=2 2026-04-04: counted count=3 2026-04-05: counted count=4 2026-04-06: counted count=5 2026-04-07: counted count=6 2026-04-08: counted count=7 2026-04-09: counted count=8 2026-04-10: counted count=9 2026-04-11: counted count=10

Summary

Notice clocks should show trigger date, count rule, computed review date, and human review as separate fields.

clock plus review\text{clock plus review}