No if you are evicted you do not live there anymore and there for don't have to pay rent.
When you are evicted yet you have paid rent, you can file a dispute at the rent tribunal.
Yes, you can be evicted for any lawful reason, according to your lease or other agreement, read in context of your local laws.
A tenant can be evicted for habitually paying their rent late. In Massachusetts, being late twice in twelve months is grounds for eviction.
That depends on the laws of your state.
To evict people from a given house in which they are paying rent, you have to give them a 3-month written notice.
Check in with your local housing program to see if you are still eligible to do so.
In Massachusetts - many other states - the law prohibits a landlord from prosecuting a no-fault eviction soon after there are uncorrected code violations in the unit. There is an assumption that the tenant is being evicted in retailation for reporting the violations to authorities. The tenant can, however, be evicted for a reason, such as non-payment of rent.
If you are late with rent payment you can be evicted at any time.
You can be evicted for not paying your rent.
The couple was evicted from their apartment because they were always very late with the rent.
This is somewhat you mean by owing rent. If you were evicted for nonpayment of rent than the landlord could sue you for the money you owe in back rent. Since there was no lease involved, your landlord cannot sue for future rent.
As long as you are paying your rent on time & have not caused other problems (destruction of property, etc.), you cannot be evicted. If, however, your rental unit is somehow attached to your job (hired man on a farm, etc.), then your employer must still give you 60 days' written notice of eviction.