If that is what the property wants. They do own what you are renting. I putthe question into proper English. Hope that you didn't mind! ;-)
A landlord is generally a person owns property for rent. A tenant is someone who rents property from a landlord.
Generally there is no point in suing a property manager for not collecting rent. It should be noted that the tenant is responsible for paying his rent on time. It is not the responsibility for the landlord to collect the rent. If the landlord does not collect rent and the tenant should send it to the landlord by mail or in person.
A tenant is a person who occupies a property, often an apartment, from another person, often known as a landlord. The tenant often pays rent for the property the tenant occupies.
Aslong as the landlord is the legal owner of the property (inquire at the registry of deeds), the tenant is obligated to pay the rent to him.
No.
This is a certificate given from a property owner to the new property owner, which details all aspects of the tenant occupancy of the property, such as how many tenants, their information, how much they're paying in rent, etc.
Generally, no. The possession of someone else's property for a debt is a "pledge" or "security agreement" that goes well beyond the mere obligation to pay rent. In other words, the tenant must AGREE to allow the landlord to have a security interest in the tenant's property. However, if the landlord has accrued moving and storage fees for the tenant's property, the landlord often has an automatic "lien" on the property for payment of those expenses, but not the overdue rent. When the landlord perfects the lien, holds a public auction and sells the tenant's property, the landlord can usually only keep the amount of profit (if any) that covers the expenses, unless there is also a court order that the tenant owes other rent, penalties, fees, interest, costs, etc.
The tenant owes the rent to the landlord up the day of a foreclosure sale.
You probably don't have to (landlord/tenant laws vary by state), but you would be really stupid to rent property without a written agreement.
Bankruptcies don't cover issues regarding rent. The renting of property, especially residential, is not an extension of credit-- it's the right to live on the property. A tenant filing bankruptcy still has to pay rent.
Nada!
To be a tenant one is only required to occupy property that they do not own, through lend from the owner or rent paid to the owner. Yes, a person can become a tenant of his grandfather. If a grandfather owns property and lends it to his grandson, or rents it to his grandson, the grandfather is the landlord, and the grandson is the tenant.