Mom ultimately prevails in her legal struggle to evict her two sons, ages 40 and 42…

It’s no surprise that parents want their children to go, but one mother was forced to live with her adult sons.

The anonymous 75-year-old widow was living with her two sons, ages 40 and 42, at her house in Pavia, Italy, when she became fed up with them not pulling their weight.

They were both out of work, so, like a loving mother, she let her boys live with her until they could get back on their feet.

But even when they got jobs, they didn’t leave, and to make matters worse, they supposedly didn’t pay monetarily for the home’s upkeep and didn’t perform any duties to assist their mother.

Is anyone else reminded of a particular Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly film?

According to the Italian publication Avvenire, the couple would get home in the middle of the night and leave their belongings scattered throughout the house.

Their mother, understandably, became weary of them not pulling their weight and urged them to leave, but the elderly woman said that ‘none of them wanted to know’.

With this in mind, she took matters into her own hands and applied to the courts for an eviction notice.

Because her two boys now have employment, a judge has decided in her favor.

If they were still unemployed, it would have been her responsibility as a parent to “provide maintenance.”

The judge stated that because both sons were working men over the age of 40, it ‘no longer appeared acceptable’ for them to reside with their mother.

According to the verdict, there is “no provision in the legislation that attributes to the adult child the unconditional right to remain in the home exclusively owned by the parents, against their will, and solely by virtue of the family bond.”

The couple now has until December 18 to vacate.

Adult children living with their parents is apparently not uncommon in Italy.

As of 2022, 70% of adults aged 18 to 34 still lived with their parents, 72.6 percent of whom were men.

According to a previous poll, 38.2 percent of individuals who lived with their parents worked, while 36.5 percent were students.

According to The Guardian, these percentages are higher than in past years due to ‘difficult economic conditions’ and the extended periods of time it might take to find permanent employment.

That’s probably what Step Brothers Brennan Huff and Dale Doback stated to their parents as well.