depends on the amount of coconuts. If you need a quick dump place, the toilet is perfect for flushing coconuts.
Not unless the tenant is being charged by the landlord for water, which may be illegal. The tenant must have his own water meter to be charged for water, and then only by the authority that dispenses the water.
Only if you know he is a qualified workman.
If the judgement was in favor or the tenant then the tenant won in court. An attorney is more qualified to explain the courts ruling.
If the tenant made it dirty, he should clean it. If the tenant moves out and leaves it dirty it should be charged against his cle aning deposit. Anything else needs to be spelled out in the rental agreement.
Then he is called a holdover tenant, who can be charged up to twice the amount of normal rent until he leaves, and can be evicted for non-payment if he doesn't pay it.
Yes, although a tenant is generally only required to leave the unit 'broom-clean'. If the unit required an unusual amount of cleaning, the tenant could be charged for that.
You cannot sue for back rent to a tenant who has sublet in the apartment, when you the landlord did not give permission for that to happen in the first place. You have the right to evict the tenant or to force the tenant not to sublet the apartment. You could write into the lease that if you tenant does sublet, a fee can be charged for every month the subletting occurs, until the subletting ends.
Explain it on the lease. If the tenant doesn't pay on time he can be charged a late fee (it must be reasonable) if you so state this on the lease. If the rent is really late, like let's say, 10 days, you can follow eviction procedures.
Yes, in most cases, if the tenant moved out while in lease, up to the time the lease would have expired or a tenant moved in. Not sure how you force anyone to do anything. But, your tenant is liable for the rent through his lease or until the unit is re-rented which ever comes first. However, the tenant can not be charged the rent until the rent is actually due, so the total you are owed will accrue each new month within his or her lease. I have an article about this on my blog at www.thelandlorddoctor.com or contact me at Bill@thelandlorddoctor.com Good luck! Bill
An under-tenant is a someone underneath a tenant-in-chief.
The landlord or tenant can pay for the tenant improvements
In Massachusetts, the law requires that there be a specific written agreement that the tenant will be charged for utilities. Many states are the same.