Unless you have purchased the property from your landlord as opposed to continuing to rent it, you have no right to claim to own the property. To prove ownership of the property, you would require the deed.
If the tenant damages the property he is liable for such damages. The Landlord may or may not have his own insurance for this purpose but the tenant is liable. If the Tenant has his own insurance (Renter's Insurance) then the Tenant may file a claim and damages will be covered by that insurance.
First- you cannot claim adverse possession against someone who doesn't own the property. You don't have an adverse possession against your landlord who doesn't own the property but has an adverse possession claim against the owner of the land. According to the minimal facts you provided you don't have any standing to make such a claim. You are using the property with the landlord's permission. One of the elements required to make a claim of adverse possession is that you use the property openly and notoriously (without permission).
If it is foreclosed then he does not own it. You cannot rent a property that you do not own.
A landlord does not need a license to rent to you. They just need to own the property.
If it is your own property he is not aloud too do that.
Tenant and lessee are the same thing, they are a person who rents property from a lessor who own property that he wants to lease.
Usually not. A landlord doesn't own the property of his/her tenants and insurable interest is necessary when collecting on an insurance claim. Most property policies specifically exclude coverage for property of tenants and roomers. Unless there's a relationship that exists other than the typical landlord/tenant relationship, there won't be any coverage.
Yes. But be prepared to show that the landlord knew of the dangerous condition and failed to repair it. Generally, when a tenant takes possession of a property, he or she is responsible for conditions on the property. However, you could claim that the landlord breached the implied warranty of habitability. Contact a personal injury lawyer in your area for more in-depth information on your rights and any possible legal claim against the landlord.
A landlord is a person, not a job. You are a landlord when you rent out your property. The job is property management and thus the job title is "property manager".
Yes, of course.
If your property is foreclosed, either you have the same landlord until the property actually changes hands, or you have a new landlord who can exercise his own rules, including evictions. If your landlord still has control over the property he can still collect rent, and he can still evict you if you don't pay it. When the new landlord takes over you must follow that landlord's instructions for rent payment or vacating the premises.
Landlord Property Insurance is insurance that a landlord should have on any properties that he or she owns. Landlord insurance will protect the landlord from any damage that may happen to the property as well as any liability claims that may be made against the Landlord.