If you have a lease your landlord would have to take you to court to have you kicked out of the apartment. If you are a month to month tenant then the landlord can request that you vacate with 30 days notice.
This means the apartment is allowing you to still live there (perhaps you settled and paid the arrears but not before the Landlord obtained a Judgment or writ of execution against you but chose not to kick you out)
Not without a reason, like some kind of a breach by the landlord.
You must approach it exactly like a landlord. You must file an eviction proceeding in Housing Court.
ANYTIME!
Yes!
If you sub-lease a unit, then the tenant that leases to you is considered your Landlord. Their landlord is NOT the sub-lessee's landlord. The master landlord, who usually does not allow subleasing, is not bound by the Landlord/Tenant Act toward the sub-lessee. So if they kick out your sub-landlord, they are kicking out EVERYONE. The master landlord cannot lock out his tenant unless they legally evict that tenant. Since a sub-lessee doesn't have the same rights, then they too are locked out.
Actually, you can, depending on several factors, such as whether sitting on the hallway is a violation of your lease. If the hallway is an interior hallway that leads to your apartment, you may not sit in the hallway except on furniture that has been placed there for such purposes. The main purpose of this is to keep the apartment complex quiet. Sitting on the hallway and talking to others can breach the peace within the apartment complex.
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.
Yes. This practice is called subleasing. If the landlord doesn't allow for subleasing then the tenant can be evicted.
Absolutely.
You don't make the baby kick. It will kick when it's ready and when it wants to.
In most cases, a landlord could not kick you out for something the police did if it was a medical emergency. However, it will depend on the laws in your state.