The law gives the judge a lot of power in deciding expungements. Even if you think you have a good case, the law says the judge can still say “no” if this is what they decide to do. The only time the judge has to expunge the case is if it is a “mandatory” expungement. If you disagree with the judge’s decision, you can appeal. BUT there is a good chance that the next court the case goes to will agree with the first judge’s choice. If you think the judge did not consider all of the information or did not use the law right, talk to a lawyer to see if you should appeal.
You can try to expunge the case again after some time has passed. There also needs to be more things that make expunging the case for you (the tenant) more important than future landlords knowing about the case. These can be things like time being homeless, money spent in application fees, or being denied housing at more places.
See our fact sheets Looking for an Apartment and Tenant Screening, about finding an apartment with an eviction on your record. Try to find landlords who don’t charge application fees and don’t use tenant screening services.
You have the right to add a statement to your tenant screening record explaining any evictions on your record. Make sure your tenant screening report is correct. It may have other wrong information about you.
Tenant screening companies can report evictions for 7 years, and landlords can check court files directly for as long as the court keeps records of old eviction cases. But they have to make sure that their records are current. They have to check this 24 hours or less before they give out a screening report. Ask the company to fix any errors in the report.