Yes, you can evict the spouse of a tenant who is not on the lease. You can evict a spouse when they are on the lease if you follow the right protocol.
You can indeed evict our spouse if they are not listed on lease. All is fair game when not legally stated.
Generally, tenants are required to live in condominiums in the same way that owners are required to live there. Several steps must be in place, however, according to best practices, in order for an association to evict a tenant. First, there must be evidence that the tenant has been given all the pertinent documents that outline how an owner lives in the property. Then, that the owner sent a copy of the lease with the tenant to the board, and prior to occupancy, cleared the prospective tenant's financial and background reports to the owner's satisfaction. The association must have been involved in addressing any 'rules' violation against the tenant through the owner, that have not been satisfied by the tenant or the owner. Finally, the association's records must show that the board has the power to evict a tenant, given an owner's inability to do so.
It is possible to evict an adult child in Ontario, Canada. The process is very similar to evicting another tenant, where the parent has to lay down all rules and regulations in writing to be signed, followed by an eviction notice for breaking such rules.
Is their name on a lease or deed? If yes, then you have to evict. If not, you are the "king of the castle" and can determine who stays and goes. The police WILL enforce it. I've had a few tenants whose druggie kids moved back in temporarily and then refused to leave and the cops WILL get them out and tell them to make arrangements to get their "stuff" later.
File for an injuctive order declaring that the person is not a tenant, and they have to leave. A Housing Court might be a good idea, if available. Added: Agree with above answer - also- it may depend on how long the 'squatter' has been occupying the premises. He might have become a 'tenant' by 'right of adverse possession.' You will have to do some checking into the local statutes that govern landlord/tenant relations in your julrisdiction.
First of all, you and the other person on the lease must agree that the roommate should be evicted. Then, you should sit down with the roommate and try to work out a plan for the roommate to leave. Any agreement you can work out will be far easier and cheaper than using the legal process (see below).Next, if the roommate has agreed to pay rent, buy groceries, etc. (which means he/she is not a guest) you must give the roommate written notice to leave. 20 days' notice is what most states require, but you should check out your state's law. If the roommate still refuses to leave, then you must evict him/her in the same way a landlord evicts a tenant. See How Do You Evict a Tenant? below.If the roommate is a guest, then you will need to file a lawsuit for ejection against the roommate. Unless you are an expert at your state's civil court procedure, you will need to hire an attorney to represent you in the lawsuit.
youy cant evict them until they die look up news a landlord recently killed a siting tenant
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.
Each state has its own rules for dealing with nonpaying tenants. Generally, a notice is handed to the tenant or sent by certified mail, then eviction proceedings are commenced in court.
Whether a tenant is disabled does not have a bearing on whether he can be evicted. If a PHA has the right to evict a tenant then it can evict such person regardless of disability.
If a landlord has an objection to a tenant and wishes to evict that tenant then yes, he does have to inform the tenant in question about the objection. Tenants must be given an opportunity to remedy the problem rather than being evicted.
You need to either speak to an eviction service or a lawyer. You do not want to get this wrong because US courts are very protective of tenants in these circumstances.
HUD and the housing authority are not directly responsible for any damages caused by its client tenants. If the tenant damages property, you have the right to evict him just as you would any other tenant. If you take the tenant to court and win the eviction, the tenant will lose his voucher permanently.
no
I am presuming we have three components here: a landlord, a tenant, and a subtenant. The landlord in this case is presumably renting to a tenant, while the tenant is presumably renting to a subtenant. I presume that tenant has a lease while the subtenant doesn't. The tenant becomes the landlord for the subtenant. Since there is no lease (in most states subletting does not involve a lease) in this case, the tenant who is the subtenant landlord can evict the subtenant. While the main landlord can evict the tenant -which automatically evicts the subtenant -only the tenant can evict the subtenant. But the main landlord can evict all by evicting the tenant.
As long as the landlord still has control over the property he has the right to collect rent on it and evict non-paying tenants.
Yes--but only if the landowner has given the tenant a power of attorney or like document to legally act on the landowner's behalf.
A landlord must file an eviction through the Civil Court in order to evict a tenant.