#1 Landlord Community
⚖️ Eviction Laws
🔄 Compare Evictions
📚 State Laws
🔎 Search Laws
🏛️ Courthouse Finder
⏱ Timeline Tool
📖 Glossary
📊 Scorecard
💰 Security Deposits
🏠 Back to Legal Resources Hub
🏠 Law-Buddy
🏠 Compare State Laws
🏠 Quick Eviction Data
🔎 Notice Calculator
🔎 Cost Estimator
🔎 Timeline Calculator
🔎 Eviction Readiness
💰 Full Landlord Tenant Laws

Missouri State Flag
Scotland County · Missouri

Scotland County Landlord-Tenant Law

Missouri landlord guide — eviction rules, courthouse info & local regulations

🏛️ County Seat: Memphis
👥 Population: ~4,800
🏭 Northeast Missouri Prairie County • 1st Judicial Circuit

Landlord-Tenant Law in Scotland County, Missouri

Scotland County occupies the far northeast corner of Missouri along the Iowa border, one of the state’s smallest and most agricultural counties with approximately 4,800 residents across 438 square miles of rolling prairie and cropland. The county seat is Memphis — not the Tennessee city, but a quiet Missouri town of roughly 1,700 that serves as the governmental, commercial, and social hub for a county where row crop farming defines the economy and the landscape in equal measure. Scotland County’s workforce is anchored almost entirely by agriculture, the county school district, and the small county government apparatus. Median household income is approximately $41,500. The rental market is micro-scale by any measure, concentrated in Memphis with minimal inventory and essentially no institutional landlord presence. All landlord-tenant matters are governed by Missouri state law (RSMo Chapters 441, 534, and 535). Evictions file with the Associate Circuit Court of the 1st Judicial Circuit at 117 S. Market St, Memphis, MO 63555, phone (660) 465-2371.

Adair Andrew Atchison Audrain Barry Barton
Bates Benton Bollinger Boone Buchanan Butler
Caldwell Callaway Camden Cape Girardeau Carroll Carter
Cass Cedar Chariton Christian Clark Clay
Clinton Cole Cooper Crawford Dade Dallas
Daviess DeKalb Dent Douglas Dunklin Franklin
Gasconade Gentry Greene Grundy Harrison Henry
Hickory Holt Howard Howell Iron Jackson
Jasper Jefferson Johnson Knox Laclede Lafayette
Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn Livingston Macon
Madison Maries Marion McDonald Mercer Miller
Mississippi Moniteau Monroe Montgomery Morgan New Madrid
Newton Nodaway Oregon Osage Ozark Pemiscot
Perry Pettis Phelps Pike Platte Polk
Pulaski Putnam Ralls Randolph Ray Reynolds
Ripley Saline Schuyler Scotland Scott Shannon
Shelby St. Charles St. Clair St. Francois St. Louis County St. Louis City
Ste. Genevieve Stoddard Stone Sullivan Taney Texas
Vernon Warren Washington Wayne Webster Worth
Wright

📊 Scotland County Quick Stats

County Seat Memphis
Population ~4,800
Median HH Income ~$41,500
Major Employers agriculture, Scotland County R-I Schools, county government
Notable Iowa border; one of Missouri%%NOTABLE_STAT%%rsquo;s smallest counties by population
Landlord Rating 4/10 — Very Small Remote Rural Market

⚖️ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice Demand for Rent (no statutory minimum)
Lease Violation Notice 10-Day Notice to Quit
Court 1st Judicial Circuit — 117 S. Market St, Memphis
Court Phone (660) 465-2371
Court Hours Mon–Fri 8:00am–5:00pm
Avg Timeline 14–45 days start to finish

Scotland County Local Regulations

County-level and municipal regulations that supplement Missouri state law.

Category Details
Local Ordinances Scotland County has no county-level rent control or tenant protection ordinances beyond Missouri state law. Memphis has minimal municipal regulatory infrastructure. Landlords in Scotland County operate in one of Missouri’s simplest regulatory environments — state habitability and security deposit law is the primary compliance framework. Rural properties with private wells and septic are common; document system conditions thoroughly at move-in and address maintenance responsibilities explicitly in the lease.
Rent Control Prohibited statewide under Missouri law. No municipality in Scotland County may impose rent caps or stabilization measures.
Security Deposit Missouri law does not cap security deposits. Landlords may collect any amount agreed upon in the lease. Return within 30 days of move-out with an itemized deduction list (RSMo §535.300). Failure to comply may expose the landlord to damages plus court costs.
1st Judicial Circuit Scotland County evictions are handled by the Associate Circuit Court of the 1st Judicial Circuit at 117 S. Market St, Memphis, MO 63555, phone (660) 465-2371. The 1st Circuit serves several small northeast Missouri counties with very low landlord-tenant caseload. Cases move quickly given minimal docket volume. Always call ahead before driving to Memphis to file — courthouse staffing is limited.
Business Entity Requirement Missouri requires that LLCs, corporations, and other business entities be represented by a licensed attorney in landlord-tenant proceedings. Individual landlords may represent themselves pro se.
Small Market Screening Discipline In a county of 4,800 people, every rental decision is made in a social context where landlord and applicant likely share community connections. Written screening criteria applied consistently to every applicant are the primary protection against fair housing liability in markets this small. Document objective reasons for every application decision — approval and denial alike.

Last verified: 2026-04-01

🏛️ Scotland County Courthouse

1st Judicial Circuit — Memphis

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Missouri

💰 Eviction Cost Snapshot

Typical fees for a Scotland County eviction

💰 Eviction Costs: Missouri
Filing Fee $25-75
Total Est. Range $100-400
Service: — Writ: —

Missouri Eviction Laws

State statutes that apply throughout Scotland County

⚡ Quick Overview

0 (can file immediately when rent is past due)
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
10
Days Notice (Violation)
21-60
Avg Total Days
$$25-75
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type Rent and Possession Petition (no advance notice required for nonpayment)
Notice Period 0 (can file immediately when rent is past due) days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes - tenant can pay and stay before judgment; also after judgment before writ execution date
Days to Hearing 5-21 days
Days to Writ 10 days after judgment (appeal period) days
Total Estimated Timeline 21-60 days
Total Estimated Cost $100-400
⚠️ Watch Out

CRITICAL: Missouri does NOT require advance notice for nonpayment - landlord can file Rent and Possession immediately after rent is due. No demand required if tenant owes 1+ full month rent (lawsuit itself is deemed sufficient demand). Petition must include: exact street address; lease terms (quote entire lease or attach copy); amount of rent due at time of filing; allegation that rent was demanded and not paid. STRONG pay-and-stay right: before judgment tenant pays rent + costs to stay; after judgment tenant pays full judgment amount before writ execution date. Landlord CANNOT refuse payment. Two separate tracks: Rent-and-Possession (Ch. 535 for nonpayment only) vs. Unlawful Detainer (Ch. 534 for violations). Late charges may be challenged as illegal penalties unless defined as liquidated damages in lease. Entities (LLC/Corp) MUST have attorney.

Underground Landlord

📝 Missouri Eviction Process (Overview)

  1. Serve the required notice based on the eviction reason (nonpayment or lease violation).
  2. Wait for the notice period to expire. If tenant cures the issue (where allowed), the process stops.
  3. File an eviction case with the Associate Circuit Court - Rent and Possession (Ch. 535). Pay the filing fee (~$$25-75).
  4. Tenant is served with a summons and has the opportunity to respond.
  5. Attend the court hearing and present your case.
  6. If you prevail, obtain a writ of possession from the court.
  7. Law enforcement executes the writ and removes the tenant if necessary.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This page provides general information about Missouri eviction laws and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction procedures can vary by county and may change over time. Local jurisdictions may have additional requirements or tenant protections. For specific legal guidance, consult a qualified Missouri attorney or local legal aid organization.
🐛 See an error on this page? Let us know
Underground Landlord Underground Landlord
🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Missouri landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Missouri — including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references — is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need Missouri's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
Ready to File?

Generate Missouri-Compliant Legal Documents

AI-generated, state-specific eviction notices, pay-or-quit letters, lease termination documents, and more — pre-filled with your tenant's information and built to Missouri requirements.

Generate a Document → View AI Hub →

⏱ Notice Period Calculator

Calculate your required notice period

📋 Notice Period Calculator

Select your state, eviction reason, and the date you plan to serve notice. We'll calculate your earliest filing date and key milestones.

⚠️ Disclaimer: These calculations are estimates based on state statutes and typical court timelines. Actual results vary by county, court backlog, and case specifics. Always verify current requirements with your local courthouse. This is not legal advice.
Underground LandlordUnderground Landlord

🏙️ Communities in Scotland County

Major municipalities

Memphis
Gorin
Rutledge
Scotland County

Screen Before You Sign

School district and county government employees are Scotland County’s most reliable tenants. Apply objective written criteria to every applicant without exception — community familiarity is not a substitute for formal screening and creates fair housing risk when applied inconsistently. Run Case.net for Scotland, Schuyler, and Clark counties before signing.

Run a Tenant Background Check →

Renting in Scotland County: Missouri’s Northeast Prairie Corner

Scotland County is the kind of place that rewards a certain kind of landlord and makes no sense for another kind entirely. With fewer than 5,000 residents, a county seat of 1,700, and an economy built almost entirely on row crop agriculture and public employment, it sits at the extreme small end of Missouri’s rental market spectrum. There are no apartment complexes here, no property managers, no competing institutional investors, and no online listing platforms generating meaningful traffic. What there is, for the landlord who understands the market, is a small and stable tenant pool, very low acquisition costs, minimal regulation, and the kind of isolation from market competition that preserves pricing power even at modest rent levels.

Memphis and the County Economy

Memphis is Scotland County’s only town of any consequence, and it functions as the full-service hub for the surrounding agricultural territory. The courthouse, the school, the hospital clinic, the farm supply businesses, and the handful of retail and dining options that serve the county all cluster in and around Memphis. The rental market in Scotland County is essentially the rental market in Memphis: a collection of older single-family homes, a small number of multi-unit properties, and the occasional rural rental outside town. Rents are modest — a two-bedroom house in Memphis might rent for $475 to $650 per month — and acquisition prices are correspondingly low, producing cash yields that compare favorably with Missouri’s more competitive markets once the full cost picture is accounted for.

The School District as Anchor

The Scotland County R-I School District is the county’s most important single employer from a landlord’s perspective. Teachers, administrators, coaches, and support staff employed by the district represent the most stable and screenable tenant segment available in the market: their income is verified through public payroll, their employment contracts run on multi-year cycles, and their professional commitment to the community is built into the nature of their work. A teacher who has chosen to build a career in Scotland County has generally made a deliberate values-based decision to live in a small rural community — not a temporary career waystation — and that rootedness translates directly into longer tenancies and lower turnover. Landlords who successfully market to and retain district employees can build a portfolio with remarkably low vacancy and management intensity over time.

Agricultural Workforce Housing

Beyond the school district, Scotland County’s rental demand comes primarily from the agricultural workforce — full-time employees of large farming operations, grain elevator and co-op workers, equipment dealership staff, and the various trades workers who maintain the infrastructure of a farm-dependent economy. Income verification for this segment requires attention to employment type: employees of established operations with regular payroll cycles are straightforward to underwrite. Self-employed farmers and contract workers require tax return documentation covering at least two years to establish reliable income history. The seasonal nature of some agricultural income — particularly for operators whose cash flow peaks at harvest — means that bank statements covering a full twelve-month period are more informative than a single month’s pay stub for this applicant type.

Operating in a Community Where Everyone Knows Everyone

The social dynamics of a county of 4,800 people create both advantages and risks for landlords that deserve explicit attention. The advantage is information: in a community this small, a landlord who has lived in Scotland County for any length of time has access to informal knowledge about prospective tenants — their work history, their reputation, their family situation — that no credit report or background check can replicate. That informal knowledge, used carefully and as a supplement to formal screening rather than a replacement for it, is genuinely valuable. The risk is the flip side of the same coin: when everyone knows everyone, the social pressure to make exceptions — to rent to a friend’s family member who doesn’t quite meet income thresholds, or to deny an application to someone you’ve had a personal conflict with — is constant and often subtle. Both impulses, however well-intentioned, create fair housing liability that is legally identical to the liability that arises from explicit discriminatory intent. Written criteria, consistently applied, are the only reliable protection.

The 1st Judicial Circuit and Eviction Process

Evictions in Scotland County are filed with the Associate Circuit Court of the 1st Judicial Circuit at 117 S. Market St, Memphis, MO 63555, phone (660) 465-2371. The 1st Circuit covers multiple small northeast Missouri counties; Scotland County’s landlord-tenant caseload is among the lowest in the state. Cases move quickly when they arise — there is no backlog to navigate. Missouri’s standard framework applies: no statutory waiting period before filing a rent and possession action for nonpayment, 10-day notice required for lease violation cases, 30 days to terminate month-to-month tenancies. LLCs must use a licensed attorney; individual landlords may self-represent. Call the clerk at (660) 465-2371 before making the drive to Memphis to confirm filing hours and current fees.

Who Scotland County Works For

Scotland County works for a landlord who is local or near-local, who has the patience for a market that moves slowly and rewards consistency over years rather than quarters, and whose return expectations are calibrated to north Missouri rent levels rather than metro benchmarks. It does not work for an absentee investor, for someone who needs professional management infrastructure, or for a landlord whose exit strategy depends on selling to another investor at a premium. What it offers in return for those constraints is genuine: one of Missouri’s most affordable entry points into rental property ownership, a regulatory environment of near-total simplicity, zero institutional competition, and a tenant pool that — screened carefully and treated fairly — has strong reasons to stay put in a community they have chosen as home.

Neighboring Missouri Counties

← View All Missouri Landlord-Tenant Law

Disclaimer: This page provides general information about landlord-tenant law in Scotland County, Missouri and is not legal advice. Always verify current requirements with the 1st Judicial Circuit Court or a licensed Missouri attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.

📋

View Membership Plans

Compare plans and pricing.

Explore by State

ALAKAZARCACOCTDEDCFLGAHIIDILINIAKSKYLAMEMDMAMIMNMSMOMTNENVNHNJNMNYNCNDOHOKORPARISCSDTNTXUTVTVAWAWVWIWY

Click any state to explore resources

🏠

Manage Your Properties

Track every expense automatically.

Browse Laws by State

AL AK AZ AR CA CO CT DE DC FL GA HI
ID IL IN IA KS KY LA ME MD MA MI MN
MS MO MT NE NV NH NJ NM NY NC ND OH
OK OR PA RI SC SD TN TX UT VT VA WA
WV WI WY