Property Models
Landlord Tenant Notice Clock
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.
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.
Use a stated notice clock
The stated classroom model uses a toy landlord-tenant notice clock. It is scheduling data, not housing advice.
Example trigger data
The toy trigger date is April 1, 2026. The stated clock adds 10 calendar days.
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.
Diagram note
The diagram is a toy notice clock. It does not select a landlord, tenant, filing, or possession outcome.
Jurisdiction: US; as of 2026-06-24; not legal advice; Code encodes the stated structural model, not the law itself.
Summary
Notice clocks should show trigger date, count rule, computed review date, and human review as separate fields.