Let's say you can try. There is nothing wrong with that. Whether or not you will be able to rent is totally up to the new landlord. The new tenant questionnaire may ask something like "have you ever been evicted ... ". If you have and answer it 'no', you face perjury charges later on. Be honest right up front with the new landlord ... maybe with a good explanation, they might rent to you.
No if you are evicted you do not live there anymore and there for don't have to pay rent.
You should be able to, as long as she's the one originally on the lease. They will assume that if she could pay rent alone, then she could do it just as easily with you living there. It also depends on why you were evicted. LATE RENT= Shouldn't be a problem. POLICE ACTION, COMPLAINTS= Not a chance. Good luck.
if a person is disabled with a 7 year old son in low income housing in Maine can he still be evicted due 2 a former spouse that has been charged with a felony and was told that he and son have to move out to.
Check in with your local housing program to see if you are still eligible to do so.
They had a complex system of colorful knots. A different color meant a different letter or number. Scientists still don't know what this means.
If someone you know still lives there, you can certainly be your friend's guest. If you were evicted for some reason having to do with violence or other crime, the landlord could have gotten a restraining order preventing you from returning, but that would be unusual.
A tenant can be evicted for habitually paying their rent late. In Massachusetts, being late twice in twelve months is grounds for eviction.
As long as you are paying your rent on time & have not caused other problems (destruction of property, etc.), you cannot be evicted. If, however, your rental unit is somehow attached to your job (hired man on a farm, etc.), then your employer must still give you 60 days' written notice of eviction.
The same reasons you can be evicted from any rental unit.Ans2 - That's not necessarily true. -It depends on the area where you live. In BC, Canada, we now have the "Manufactured Home Park Tenancy Act" - It's quite different from the "Residential Tenancy Act" - which applies to rental apartments and rooms.You can still be evicted for the same reasons! Maybe the laws aren't the same-- and you're referring to a foreign country-- but the reasons for evictions are basically the same.Ans4 - Which is "a foreign country" -I had the impression this is a world wide site. What makes you think the Questioner is NOT from Canada.With different laws and governing bodies, how can you realistically say "for the same reasons?" You have no way of knowing that !This is Answers.com, not answers.ca
it is a complex sentence because is has an aaawwwuubbis
complex cya kay broad man kaayo ang communication..and making comunication or establish communication is easy.. but it is still complex and complictated..
Because it is still paper but it looks different than before. That help?