No. Your only interest in the property is as a tenant. Your rights to occupy the property would die with you.
Possibly rental, rented, rent, lease, leased, leasing, borrowed, not yours someone else's, NOT YOUR OWN PROPERTY.
i dont know ask someone else
Also known as a lessee.
It is an someone's else's abandoned car on someone else's property, and you are trying to get it.Very bad idea. Leave it alone. Get envolved with this car and you are just asking for trouble. Turn around walk away and forget this car.
If the car is on the owners property (rented property counts) NOAnywhere else, Yes
No. Son will automatically own the property when mother dies. Mother cannot devise her share to anyone else. That is the purpose of a joint tenancy.
Leave him!
Depending on where you live your landlord may have to give you a certain number of days notice before you are required to leave the premises (unless you are putting yourself or someone else in danger). Until then, you are not the old tenant, but the current tenant and your rented property can not be handed over to another party.
Generally yes. If the contents belonged to the decedent then they would be part of the estate. All the contents may not belong to the decedent if the property was rented to the decedent or rented by the decedent to someone else. If another person lived with the decedent some of the propery may belong to that companion.
It's legal if the traps are on land owned or rented by you or your family, in which case you could even take the traps and resell them. On public land you could move them if they are a hazard to you or your family, but it still counts as the trap owner's property. If the traps are on someone else's land entirely, it's at the discretion of the property owner.
Its an algebra property(: ask someone else cause i got no idea!
If a person who owns property conveys it by deed before their death and they bequeathed the same property to someone else in their will, the deed prevails. If the property was already conveyed to someone else the property was not part of the estate assets when the testator died.