Looking at Weki, there's something like this.
For tenants, the most important thing is to receive a transfer and a fixed date before the cancellation reference right occurs. It should be noted that the fixed date is treated as received immediately, but if you report your move-in, it is treated as moving-in at midnight on that day.
For example, if a person who rents a house reports a transfer at 2 p.m., but the owner receives a loan at 3 p.m., the transfer is made only at midnight on that day, so it means that he or she moves in after he or she owes money. In other words, The cancellation standard right arises at 15:00, but the move-in is treated as having to be done at 24:00, or later, so if the house is seized, the tenant is driven out.
Therefore, the best way to preserve the deposit from the tenant's point of view is to report the transfer the day before the balance is paid, and the next day, check the copy of the registration and pay the balance if there is no mortgage or other in progress. Since the tenant's counterforce arises from three conditions: a fixed date, a transfer report, and an actual residence, making a transfer report a day earlier does not violate the owner's rights. This is because if you can't actually live because you don't pay the balance the next day after the transfer report, you don't have the power to fight.[2] This is a simple and effective way to protect tenants' deposits, but the reality is that it does not work well under actual lease contracts.
Source:
I wonder if there are any cases where this is mean, but I think it's better to be careful.
1446 2018-12-15 Gentleman
There is also a saying that you can put in "no additional loans" before reporting the transfer to the contract
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