Not in most states.
If your lease is over :the day it ends the Landlord may throw your inventory away or sell it or anything else as the day your Lease ran out it became abandoned property Storage of property:If your inventory is stored outside of the area you have leased it is abandoned property and may be disposed of without notice If you discontinue paying for a storage area or container it does not become abandoned property for a fixed period as set by law in your area. In mine 90 days from last payment for storage your property may be disposed of. No notice required, it is your responsibility to keep up.If the Landlord removes your property from an area leased by you and you are up to date on your rent then he should not be able to dispose of any of your property.BUTIf you or him are legally ordered to clean up or dispose of property on a property this will be binding on you as well as the landlord. If you don't cooperate the landlord is required to dispose of your property.
Steps that can be taken to avoid the legal process of distraint is to pay the rent every month without elapsing on payment. When several payments are missed, the landlord can seize property to sell for payment of the missed rent.
Most insurance companies that sell homeowners and renter's insurance also sell landlord insurance. Some companies where someone could purchase landlord insurance include Allstate, MetLife, and Progressive.
In most jurisdictions, yes. A landlord can hold personal effects and in many cases sell them to recoup money owed. When a landlord holds personal effects or sell them to recoup money owed, this is called 'conversion' and landlord is liable to the tenant for the 'reasonable value' of the property regardless of what they were sold for .... you got it, now the judge becomes the trier of fact on what was 'reasonable value.' The better practice is to store the property ... in California after 15 days... and let the tenant or prior owner pay the storage fee to regain possession of the personal effects.
Most commercial transportation companies, such as Uhaul or Ustor, sell storage containers to the public; but, storing household goods onsite (at commercial storage facilities) is also an option. The drawback to onsite storage is the monthly/yearly payment rate, wherein storage at home cost nothing - it just takes up space at your home.
There are many online retailers that sell affordable storage baskets. Some of the best online retailers that sell the best storage baskets are eBay or Amazon.
In some states, the lease survives the sale; in others, it does not. Regardless, the landlord certainly has the right to sell.
Yes.
If the landlord wants to sell the rental property, the tenant has different rights depending on what state the property is in. Usually, a landlord has to give 60 days notice for an intent to sell. Then, it is up to the landlord whether or not the property can be occupied by the tenant until the sale date. If there is a lease, the landlord usually cannot sell the property until the lease is up, but all states have different rules regarding occupancy.
The following insurance companies sell Landlord insurance policies and can be contacted by calling them for a quote. Among some popular choice Allstate, Metlife, Liberty Mutual all have this product.
No. You don't own it to sell it.
Many of the bix-box discount stores sell plastic storage containers. You can buy them at Target or WalMart or at any store that specializes in storage solutions.