If you are not paying rent, then the landlord has the right to reclaim the home after giving notice. It seems to me that saving your belongings was a kindness, but if they had to go into storage, then you should be responsible to pay the going rate for that effort. Depending on your local laws, there may not be any requirement that the landlord care for your belongings.
Yes, after you are out a landlord can do anything with items you leave behind.
How a landlord deals with your possessions vary from state to state in terms of law. In Florida, for example, your landlord can keep your possessions, while in South Carolina, your possessions must be moved to a curbside where you would have access to them to remove them. If the property remains there after three days then the landlord can arrange for them to be disposed of. And in some states the landlord has to place the items in storage, of which the tenant will be responsible for its fees.
The diiference between landlord & renters insurance is that landlord insurance is a policy that covers property owner from financial losses with their property.Renters insurance is policy that cover the renter from financial losses or personal items.
Often the Police will not do anything until there is an order from a court giving Landlord permission to enter the unit and remove Tenant's personal items. If Landlord fears Tenant's reaction to this, Landlord can arrange, with the Sheriff's Department, for a police officer to be present. The officer him/herself cannot partake in the removal of the property. This all, of course, depends on your state's laws. Tenant's rights seem to be stronger than landlord's rights. You'll likely have to go to court.
Not for personal use, but in order to distribute and evaluate assets, yes.
No real accounts are for business possessions like assets and stock revenue and expense items are recorded in the nominal also named the general ledger. Personal accounts are for debtors and creditors accounts.
You may have to keep the landlord's items in your rental property. Information regarding this should be discussed in your rental agreement.
The landlord is required to make reasonable attempts to notify the former tenant that he must remove his possessions. How long the landlord must wait before he disposes of the items depends on how much time the tenant has paid rent for. The time also depends on the jurisdiction.
The repo company will remove personal items from vehicles they repossess. They'll typically charge a storage fee for you to retrieve those items.
Yes, and will be upheld in court. Unless items are in violation of the Landlord act of that state. If the lease is not "breaking" your states landlord act they are valid even if they sound absurd.
It is unseemly that a landlord can charge a tenant for other than the items listed in the lease. You can pay them and take your landlord to landlord-tenant court for reimbursement, or you can approach a landlord-tenant advocacy to find the answer that you want.
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