I have never heard of this, but, you can go to your local City Hall (get a friend to take a picture of the outside of the building and where you live) and form a complaint at City Hall. In most States (in Canada as well) the City can force the Owner of the property to clean it up (give them several months) and these slum lords will take their time and another complaint will have to be made, but the City will force the slum lord (we have them here too) to clean it up NOW or the City will clean it up and force the landlord to pay. Slum lords buy up old properties because they are usually good investments down the road and the tenants of that building are the last thing on their mind. There are laws about unsafe and unclean conditions, but most cities or towns seldom follow up on these places. I know it's very difficult for someone who is having a rough time to find a decent place to live, but if you can, please try to find a better neighborhood and a better place to live. Sometimes if you are lucky homeowners will rent out large suits and the cost isn't always that high. I wish you luck. Marcy
No. There are laws that govern ownership of real property and your claim would not meet the requirements of a legal claim to acquire title to real property. You have no case in that regard.
No. A landlord has no authority over anything but the property he owns and rents to you.
No. If the property is about to be foreclosed, the landlord has no obligation to give the tenant any notice of anything. After the foreclosure, the landlord will have nothing to do with the tenant.
If your landlord signed something that stated they would fix the issues, then you can sue them. If you did not sign anything, a judge will assume you accepted the property in the condition it was in when you viewed it.
The landlord is responsible for anything needing done to make the property suitable for decent living. AC and heat, hot water, roof leaks, good plumbing ect. are all on the landlord.
A landlord is a person, not a job. You are a landlord when you rent out your property. The job is property management and thus the job title is "property manager".
Normally not. Anything that is part of the property is covered by the landlord as part of the property. However, you are responsible for any damages you incur upon such, something your insurance will often cover.
Landlord Property Insurance is insurance that a landlord should have on any properties that he or she owns. Landlord insurance will protect the landlord from any damage that may happen to the property as well as any liability claims that may be made against the Landlord.
A landlord is generally a person owns property for rent. A tenant is someone who rents property from a landlord.
Every landlord is required to have insurance, but now the question is what type of insurance. Property insurance is likely the type of insurance that the landlord is carrying. This does not cover anything inside the property that belongs to the tenant. For this, the tenant needs to purchase separate insurance called renters insurance.
Damage to anything covered by the landlord's insurance, because the landlord owns the property not the renter. Such damage would be covered under homeowner's insurance, because the homeowner owns the property.
A landlord is a person that takes care of a property. An owner is the person that owns the property. This can be the same person. An owner can also hire a landlord.
In the situation you describe, is the landlord the sole owner, and you are a renter or lessee? If the landlord is the sole owner of the property, and you are the lessee, they remain the landlord/sole owner despite where they may live. If you are renting the property from the landlord, you are only a lessee and not a joint owner.