Generally speaking, no. A landlord can only terminate a lease if the tenant violates the terms of it.
With the exception of New Jersey, any state allows a tenant or landlord to terminate a tenancy with a full rental period notice, for no reason.
As long as the notice is sufficient, and there is no unexpired lease, the landlord can ask a tenant to leave for no reason at all.
what can a landlord charge to move in a California house rental?
No, a landlord cannot change the locks for abandonment if the tenant has not moved out of the rental property. Changing locks without proper legal process could be considered an illegal eviction and may expose the landlord to legal consequences.
Yes. Many rental apps will ask this question anyway. And, your sentence is public information so there is no reason your landlord couldn't find out anyway.
That is the correct spelling of the word "landlord" (the lessor of rental residences).
Usually the landlord, but there's no law about it.
In many states it is illegal for a landlord to hold from a prospective tenant any material facts in the rental of that unit, such as that a death occurred in that unit. But the tenant would have to prove damages that resulted from the withholding of that material fact.
Quite simple: the landlord may reclaim the property without judicial process.
landlord
Find a landlord who will allow you to rent without regard to your credit score. This will likely be a mom and pop landlord and not an apartment rental service, but you will be able to get a place and work on your credit.
You may have to keep the landlord's items in your rental property. Information regarding this should be discussed in your rental agreement.