Sharkey County Mississippi Landlord-Tenant Law: A Guide for Rental Property Owners in Rolling Fork and the Mississippi Delta
Sharkey County is one of the smallest, most isolated, and most economically challenged counties in Mississippi — and by most national metrics, one of the most impoverished in the United States. It is also, in March 2023, the county whose county seat of Rolling Fork was struck by one of the deadliest and most destructive tornadoes in Mississippi history, an event that fundamentally altered the town’s housing landscape and continues to shape everything about the local rental market as of this writing. For landlords operating in Sharkey County — or considering doing so — the legal framework is Mississippi state law, the market is a Delta poverty economy overlaid with active disaster recovery, and the practical demands of responsible landlordship here are significant. This guide covers all of it.
Rolling Fork: Birthplace of the Blues, Epicenter of a Disaster
Rolling Fork holds a specific place in American cultural history as the birthplace of McKinley Morganfield — known to the world as Muddy Waters — the foundational Delta blues musician whose migration to Chicago and subsequent recordings for Chess Records essentially created modern electric blues and, through its influence on British rock musicians in the 1960s, helped shape rock and roll itself. That heritage is present in Rolling Fork’s identity and, in a tangible way, in the local economy: blues tourism is a modest but real draw, and the broader Delta blues trail has brought some cultural tourism investment to the region over the years.
On the evening of March 24, 2023, Rolling Fork’s identity was permanently marked by disaster. An EF4 tornado — with estimated winds exceeding 170 miles per hour — tracked directly through the heart of Rolling Fork, killing 14 residents, injuring more than 40 others, and destroying or heavily damaging a large portion of the town’s homes, businesses, churches, and community infrastructure. The tornado was part of a broader outbreak that struck multiple Delta counties, but Rolling Fork bore the most concentrated damage. National media coverage brought the town’s name to a global audience for the first time since Muddy Waters, though under devastatingly different circumstances. President Biden visited the area in the days following the tornado, and FEMA, the state of Mississippi, and dozens of nonprofits mobilized relief and recovery operations.
As of 2026, Rolling Fork is still rebuilding. The recovery has been complicated by the county’s pre-existing poverty and limited tax base, the small size of the local government, the complexity of coordinating federal disaster recovery funds with local rebuilding capacity, and the ongoing challenge of retaining and attracting residents to a community that was already experiencing population decline before the tornado struck. For landlords, this means operating in a market that is simultaneously constrained by decades-old poverty dynamics and disrupted by the acute aftermath of a major natural disaster — a combination that requires careful attention to property condition, legal compliance, and realistic financial expectations.
The Sharkey County Rental Market: What Exists and What to Expect
The rental market in Sharkey County is, in normal times, among the smallest in Mississippi. A county of 4,200 people, the majority of whom live in or near Rolling Fork, with a poverty rate above 40% and virtually no private sector employment beyond agriculture and the limited local retail and services sector, does not generate substantial rental demand. The market before the tornado consisted of a modest inventory of older single-family homes and a handful of small rental units in Rolling Fork, serving a tenant pool drawn almost entirely from county government and school district employment, SSI/SSDI recipients, Social Security retirees, and HCV participants.
The tornado changed the supply side of this equation dramatically and temporarily changed the demand side as well. Units that were destroyed or rendered uninhabitable vanished from the supply, tightening an already tiny market. Displaced residents needed immediate and longer-term housing. Recovery construction workers — roofers, framers, electricians, plumbers, FEMA contractors, nonprofit construction crews — arrived in the area and needed temporary housing. For a period following the disaster, Rolling Fork experienced something it had not seen in years: genuine rental demand that exceeded available supply. That dynamic has moderated as recovery has proceeded and some workers have moved on, but it has left behind a rental market that is physically different from what existed before March 2023.
For landlords with properties in Rolling Fork, the most important practical steps in this recovery environment are: first, confirm that any property offered for rent has been inspected and issued a certificate of occupancy if it was damaged and repaired — renting a unit that has not been properly permitted and inspected after storm damage creates both legal liability and, more fundamentally, a genuine safety risk to tenants; second, confirm that property insurance coverage is current and adequate given post-tornado replacement cost increases; third, be transparent with prospective tenants about any storm-related history of the property, including what was damaged, what was repaired, and by whom.
Mississippi Law, Screening, and the Eviction Process in Sharkey County
Sharkey County has no local landlord-tenant ordinances, no rent control, and no just-cause eviction requirement. The governing framework is entirely Mississippi state law: the Mississippi Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (Miss. Code Ann. §§ 89-8-1 through 89-8-29) and the unlawful entry and detainer statutes (§§ 89-7-1 through 89-7-59). The implied warranty of habitability requires landlords to maintain structurally sound, weathertight property with functioning plumbing, heating, and electrical systems — an obligation that takes on special weight in a post-disaster environment where the line between “repaired” and “habitable” may not always be clear. Security deposits must be returned with itemized written accounting within 45 days of lease termination, delivery of possession, and written tenant demand, with a $200 penalty plus actual damages for wrongful retention under § 89-8-21.
Tenant screening in this market requires the same adaptations described for other extreme-poverty Delta counties. With a 40%+ poverty rate and minimal private employment, the conventional 3x income threshold based on private employment wages excludes most of the applicant pool. Prioritize rental history and prior landlord references, evaluate the stability and reliability of fixed income sources (SSI, SSDI, Social Security retirement, HCV subsidy), and apply all screening criteria consistently across all applicants in compliance with the Fair Housing Act. For recovery workers and construction tenants seeking short-term housing, use written leases with clearly defined terms and termination provisions, and verify employment with pay stubs or contractor agreements before signing.
All eviction proceedings are filed at Sharkey County Justice Court, 100 China Street, Rolling Fork, MS 39159, phone (662) 873-2755. Given the ongoing recovery environment, confirm current courthouse operating hours and any changes to physical location before filing. The eviction process follows Mississippi’s standard procedure: a 3-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate for nonpayment under § 89-7-27, a 14-Day Notice to Cure or Vacate for lease violations under § 89-8-13, or a 30-day notice for month-to-month terminations. Serve all notices by certified mail with return receipt or personal service with a witness, retain all documentation, and file a sworn Complaint for Unlawful Entry and Detainer after expiration of the notice period. The Sheriff serves the summons, a hearing is scheduled, and the judge rules. In this small-docket county, uncontested matters typically resolve within two to six weeks.
This guide is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant law is subject to change and may vary based on individual circumstances. Given ongoing post-tornado recovery in Rolling Fork, landlords should verify current courthouse operational status before filing. Consult a licensed Mississippi attorney or contact Sharkey County Justice Court at (662) 873-2755 for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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