Check your lease. The place is theirs and there usually is a clause where you give them permission. Usually, though, they will honor your privacy and give you a few days notice that they will be coming in.
The burden is on the tenant to prove that they paid.
For the purposes of answering this question, I presume that the tenant is a rental tenant and that the Landlord is under foreclosure. Tenant must continue to pay the rent to the landlord as long as they have control over the property. The Foreclosing company, once it takes over, must give the tenant specific instructions on to whom and where to pay their rent.
The tenant should stop paying rent whenever the governmental agency to whom the taxes are owed threatens to foreclose or repossess the property. In that case, the tenant should demand (in writing) that the landlord pay the delinquent taxes. If the landlord refuses, the tenant should move (again, upon giving written notice to the landlord).
Unless the accident was due to negligence on the part of the landlord (i.e., a poorly installed ceiling fan or unstable balcony), the lessee assumes personal responsibility, as if he or she were in their own home.
landlord
they report to the noble
Whom did you say was coming for dinner? Ask not for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee. The landlord from whom he was renting had suddenly passed away.
The landlord can raise the rent as high as and to whom he likes, but not to protected classes of individuals on their sole basis of being in such class. For example the landlord can't raise their rents to gay couples or elderly people just because they fit into those categories. It's up to the tenant to decide whether they want to continue living there with the rent now raised.
This could be a very sticky wicket. If the Master tenant (with whom the landlord has originally rented/leased) has violated the terms of agreement about subletting then the landlord can issue a 3 day eviction notice. The landlord never ever deals with or accepts rent from the subtenant, only the master tenant.When a person sublets (legally) a written agreement should always be provided which will contain such clauses as termination, etc. If there was no written agreement then the master tenant might be able to throw his sublet occupants out without probably cause or advance notice.In all cases like these be certain to check with a lawyer who is familiar with such things.
to whom is a report disseminated to and how is it done
whom did the viceroy send to check onCabeza de Vaca's report?
What kind of eligibility are you asking about and report to whom?