Actually, a 60 day notice and three-day notice are two different types of notices. The three day notice is served upon tenants who do not pay their rent, and is done as part of an eviction process.
Only if the landlord files a court case, or reports the arrearage to the credit bureaus.
(Your recruiter can help with any debts you have when you join. They don't want their soldiers distracted by debts!) Depends upon the clauses pertaining to termination of lease in the lease executed by you with your landlord. Usually, one can do so either by giving notice and continue staying till the expiry of the notice period (in case you don't intend to stay there you will still have to pay for the notice period till actual expiry); or pay damages (or whatever) as mentioned under the lease deed. Better way is to serve the termination notice to your landlord and pay for the due amount, till actual termination. Nonetheless, it is important to visit clauses of your lease deed for termination.
This depends on whether you have a power of attorney over your husband, and to what extent the power of attorney holds. If you are just doing the finances, then you may not have the right to sign the notice of termination tenancy. Besides, I don't understand why you want to sign a termination of tenancy on yourself since you are the one owns the property. What you're saying is that you are your husband's landlord.
Yes, the landlord can - either by posting on the door or by handing notice to you. But to have better documentation, the landlord should send the notice by certified mail.
a a a a a a a a aa a a a a a a a a a a
can a landlord change the locks on a commercial building without notice
in a commercial eviction does the landlord need to apply to a court for an eviction notice?
Yes, although usually the landlord is doing this around the time they are notifying you. 1) If your lease is expiring and the landlord does not want to renew on continue on a month-to-month, they will send written notice of the coming termination to make this explicit. 2) If you are on month-to-month, the landlord would owe you a certain amount of notice (different in each jurisdiction). 3) If they are planning far in advance, it is conceivable they line up a new tenant before giving you notice. 4) The most likely scenario is the landlord is testing the market to see how much interest there is. Then, if there is a lot, they know it is time for a rent increase because that's what the market will bear. If they get little interest, they are in a weaker position for upping the rent.
Under the landlord/tenant act in Florida and in most states, the landlord may not kick you out with only 24 hour notice. Depending on why the landlord is kicking you out, advanced notice must be issued, and the landlord cannot force you to move unless a judge signed an order of such. The exception to this rule is if the dwelling is uninhabitable.
That depends on the laws of the state the property is in. In Massachusetts, the natural termination of the lease is notice to leave, and the landlord can have a Summons & Complaint served the next day (in fact, if they have reason to believe that the tenant will not be leaving, they can have it served in the last 30 days). You need to check the procedures for eviction in your state.
No. If the property is about to be foreclosed, the landlord has no obligation to give the tenant any notice of anything. After the foreclosure, the landlord will have nothing to do with the tenant.
previous leaks? - notice is the key. without any notice to any parties there usually is no negligence and therefore the landlord is not responsible