Legally speaking, he does NOT have to pay rent. The courts will see him as a visitor (legal term: transient). Even if he is added to an existing lease, both parties are responsible for paying the rent by the agreed upon due date to avoid eviction. No sense in having this freeloader drag you down. Just change the locks. Good luck! If he's living in your apartment, you certainly have the right to request that he pay or get out.
This depends on where you live and with who. If you are living with family, friends, roommates, etc... and they want you to pay rent, then yes you would have to pay them the rent to stay there otherwise they can throw you out since you are not on the lease.
If you are staying with someone and the landlord found out and is now asking them for more rent, or for you to pay rent, this gets more tricky....
In most states you can stay with someone for up to two weeks and be considered a guest, but staying there anymore than 10-14 days out of the month is considered to be living there and in that case the landlord can legally request that whoever is on the lease pay an additional amount for another person staying there, otherwise the person will be violating their lease and the landlord could legally evict them.
So without more information on your question it's hard to answer it exactly, but I would say that yes, if you are not on a lease but you are living with someone and either they, or their landlord is asking for you to pay money, you can either pay it, or leave, or if the landlord is involved in asking for more money whoever you are living with could face an eviction if you don't pay the additional amount.
I am in the process of building a new website to help landlords and tenants with landlord / tenant rights, state by state housing laws, tips, advice, tools, services, etc..
I'm still working on the site right now, but it should be up online soon and I will continue building it up until early 2011. The name of it is Landlord and Tenant Laws which can be found online soon at......
http://www.LandlordAndTenantLaws.com
You can always feel free to email me with any questions you have about landlord and tenant laws through the website
A house is a building...............a home can be anywhere that someone lives, be it a house, a tent, an apartment, etc.
It depends on the landlord. Usually, the just need SS number and photo ID, as well as pay stubs or proof of income. If this is provided, you should be fine
i really want to know to i like his apartment i wanna rent oneI think he lives at the Meadows Apartment Homes in culver city
I would like to say that it is the one bedroom apartment with all necessary things. A bachelor apartment is one that combines the bedroom, living room and kitchen in the one room unit. Although small in size, it's a good choice for someone who wants to avoid room mates and save money while living in a city or town. But many bachelor apartments share a basic layout: the single room combines the living room, kitchen and sleeping area. In some bachelor apartments, the kitchen may have a window partition to separate it partly from the rest of the room, but kitchen is common for two rooms in a bachelor apartment.
The murder of millions upon millions of innocent lives, including 6.3 million Jews and 3.1 million Gypsies.
It depends if that person is named on the lease ie. a joint lease. If the roomate is the sole leasee then usually it is to the landlord discretion whether to lease to someone else. You have to inform the landlord of the change otherwise it is a breach of rental agreement. I would suspect that 99% of landlords are more than happy to have someone who lives in the property take over the lease, it saves a lot of time and money in finding a new tenant.
No. If his name is on the lease, he is permitted to come and go as he pleases. The only exception would be a restraining order which would prevent him from entering the apartment even if he lives there. The problem with that is that you would not be able to enter the apartment if he was already there too.
If he is there to visit, ask him to leave. If he refuses, call the police and have him escorted out. If he lives there, you'll have to evict him. However, if the lease is in both names, you cannot do this.
No.....he lives in an apartment. No.....he lives in an apartment.
A house is a building...............a home can be anywhere that someone lives, be it a house, a tent, an apartment, etc.
An apartment typically refers to a dwelling where someone lives. A department typically refers to a division of a store or company. Such as the shoe department or the maintenance department.
Many leases have an occupancy restriction, she'll need to review her lease document to see what is or isn't allowed.
Your neighbour should not be able to do anything to your voltages in your apartment. That said if your apartment is not a legal apartment in an apartment building then someone else might be on the same circuits as you use. Legal apartments have their own distribution panel which only serve the apartment that the tenant lives in.
Pine Street. He lives at 1312 Taylor Street.
It essentially means "the place where (someone) lives". George's domicile would be his house, or apartment, or van down by the river, or whatever; as long as he lives in it, it's his domicile.
You can break a lease for what ever reason you decide, however you will in all likelihood still be responsible for the contract you made. That is, if you find that a registered sex offender lives in the same building, you can panic and run, but you will still be liable for the rent. The responsible solution is to keep an eye on your kid, and take precautions against the child becoming the victim of the predator you don't know about.
In a apartment