Generally, no. The landlord would have to first acquire a legal interest in the office contents, either by a signed security agreement with the tenant or by filing a lien and following up with a court order of liquidation.
Of course, a tenant can certainly offer to give the landlord a commercial security interest in the office contents, or the tenant's inventory or equipment, if the tenant chooses.
The purpose of obtaining Landlord Contents Insurance is to protect the landlord from damage or loss caused by tenants. This insurance may cover appliances, fixtures, and furnishings.
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.
No. The landlord will probably have insured the building but the contents will be the tenants responsibility.
Actually, there are no specific rules which prohibit anyone from talking to another person about delinquent rents, whether it be the tenant's parents, another landlord or potential landlord, or even the tenant's doctor. However, most apartment complexes and professional landlords have a strict policy against disclosing information about specific tenants without their permission, with the exception of law enforcement officers.
Tenants have the right to complain about other tenants that are disruptive. If the landlord fails to act, then the tenants may take their complaint to the government department that that oversees Landlord Tenant disputes. This department has the authority to compell the landlord to take action if they can't or won't do it on their own.
If this noise is a problem for other tenants, the landlord may be in violation of the lease with the other tenants. This would give them a reason to leave before their lease is up.
"The tenants agreed to ask the landlord to remove snow from the path."
Yes, only if you left your assets on the property past the date your lease term ended or were evicted
All buildings- whether they have a specified number of tenants or an unspecified number of tenants- need to have landlord insurance. It is strongly reccommended.
Feudal tenants are the folks who rent betterments from a feudal landlord.
No.
Yes, a landlord can prohibit dogs even if other tenants have dogs. The 'other tenants have dogs' has no relevance in this case, it is a separate contract and is not discriminatory against dog owners.