The landlord is more responsible for the pipes than your neighbor. If it's simply a matter of the pipes underneath his bathroom leaking onto your apartment (which does suck, and I'm sorry) then that's one thing. If, however, you neighbor knew about the issue and did not report it, allowing for the resulting damage, then he is also to blame. Nonetheless, the bulk of the burden falls squarely on the landlord.
Generally speaking, no.
Can landlords get insurance?
Generally landlords are not responsible for damage to tenant belongings. This is why tenants are encouraged, and some landlords require this, to purchase rental insurance.
No because the upkeep of the pipe is the responsibility of the land lord. Check out the Landlord and tenants act.
No. This is why landlords require tenants to carry renter's insurance. Call your car insurance provider.
The people who actually own the house should be responsible for the cleanup of the tree as long as the tenants had nothing to do with it falling down. Sometimes a landlord will reduce a tenants rent if they handle things that are the landlords responsibility.
No, it is not the landlords responsibility. Tenants are responsible for the upkeep of property they are leasing. This includes maintaining the grounds and ensuring safety precautions are adhered to.
The Landlord Tenant Act is the rights and responsibilities of landlords and tenants. General obligation of tenants and landlords. It also governs the rental of commercial and residential property.
That would depend on who's angry wife your talking about. If the tenants wife damages your property or your landlords property then the tenants wife is liable for those damages. Due to the extension of common law you can also be held financially liable for actions of your spouse. The landlord would have no control over the tenants wife nor her actions and could not be held liable. If the Landlords wife came over and damaged your property or the landlords property then the Landlord and or the landlord wife would be financially liable.
In every state, landlords have a common law duty to provide adequate plumbing. In your case, the plumbing was blocked before you moved in. Accordingly, your landlord cannot hold you responsible for fixing or unblocking the pipes. If your landlord demands that you pay for the blocked pipes or you continue to have plumbing problems, you will need to see a landlord-tenant law attorney or tenant's rights group in your area.
The landlords generally got a percentage of the crop, and they wanted to maximize their own crop.
Khizer Hayat Tiwana