No, a tenant has the right to have a visitor. If the visitor is committing a crime, then the co- tenant has the right to call police. If the general conditions are unfavorable for the cotenants they should move. Generally, cotenants do not have the same obligations under a lease as does a main tenant.
no. if the visitor is breaking a law, call the police.
Tenants
The easy answer is no, as you were invited. The problem here is that an apartment complex has what are known as common areas that are accessible to all tenants. If you were "caught" trespassing in a common area by the complex management or their security, it can be said that you are trespassing if you were not in fact invited by ALL tenants of the complex, which if course would be highly unlikely.Assuming you can prove that you were invited however, this should not be an issue.The fact that this question was asked begs the further question as to why the management/security felt you was trespassing in the first place. There are always extenuating circumstances.Added: ALSO - if you have previously been "barred" from the grounds by the complex management you can be prosecuted for entering upon the property REGARDLESS of whether you were invited by an individual resident/tenant or not.
tenants by the entirety
The duration of The Tenants is 1.52 hours.
A tenant-in-chief in a feudal society is a tenant who holds land granted by the sovereign.
If the pool belongs to the Tenant then the Tenant will have to insure it.
They're guests, not tenants. You can call the police and have them removed. If they stay long enough they can be considered tenants, so be careful!! If this happens then you must evict them as you would any tenant.
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.
The Tenants was created on 2005-10-26.
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.
The property Owners Liability Insurance does not extend coverage to a Tenant. This is one reason a tenant might want to buy their own tenants liability coverage for their own protection.