If YOU, his legal spouse, signed the lease - then he cannot be evicted. If no one ever signed a valid lease, then you can all be evicted.
Yes, it is possible to get evicted if you signed a lease that does not allow cats. You will be given the option to rehome your cat, find a new apartment, or get evicted. If you signed a lease that says it allows cats (and you've paid the deposit / pet rent if applicable), then you can't be evicted.
Yes, you can. If it's in your lease contract that you signed and you don't have it, then you are considered in default or violation of the lease already.
File a civil suit for Breach of contract (provided there was a signed lease).
You will probably need to provide more details, including the jurisdiction and the terms of the lease, but generally speaking: If the lease is in the husband's name only, then after he is evicted there is no valid lease; the wife certainly has no "right" to remain at a property which a) does not belong to her and b) she does not have a valid lease for, and the landlord very definitely has the right to have her evicted or possibly even arrested for trespass if she tries to stay. If both names are on the lease and the landlord CHOOSES to evict the husband only (IANAL, but this seems somewhat messy to me, and it may or may not be legally enforceable), there's not really a question of "rights": the landlord chose not to force the wife to leave, so it's up to her whether she wants to go with her husband or not.
As long as your parents are not on the mortgage, they can be evicted. If you and your husband are on the lease, you need to come up with an agreement.
It depends on the lease agreement you signed. Some places will automatically set you up on another lease and others will not. In any case, the best thing to do is to let the management know your intentions 30 days in advance.
This should have been disclosed when the landlord performed the background check, before the lease was signed. Well, if the landlord had an application for an apartment to which the tenant denied having been evicted if there were questions that asked such, then the landlord can terminate the lease for the tenant having falsified the information given.
a cosigner is a person who is responsible for the rest of the rent that you don't pay if u get evicted the person who signed as a cosigner will have to go to court
He can be evicted. He would be a defacto tenant, and would need to be evicted according to Maryland regulations on month to month tenancy if there is no lease. If there is a lease, and he is in violation, he would need to be evicted according to the requirements of Maryland and the terms of the lease.
if you have lease, you cannot be evicted without an eviction notice,or notice to quit. If you do not have a lease you will need to deal with legal authorities on this.
Not on that basis. But if the tenant violates the terms of the lease, they can be evicted regardless of that condition.
yes