Certainly.
My guess is that it would be mute. Nothing.
No. Not technically. An unlawful detainer is the name of the pleading filed in order to eventually obtain an eviction, which is where the law comes and puts you out of your landlords property. In law words have very specific, individual meanings. Sometimes lay people use these legal words interchangeably, thereby unwittingly making "unlawful detainer" have the same general meaning as "eviction." In other words unlawful detainer is a piece of paper, and eviction is the physical act of the authorities putting you out and your landlord back in. Thanks.
Yeah. It's called you being a dumbarsh.
Some states prohibit landlord actions for 10 or 14 daysafter the rent-due date. If your state is not one of those, the automatic stay only applies to creditors collecting for debts incurred prior to filing.
The landlord's bankruptcy has nothing to do with the tenant. The tenant still owes the rent.
Yes, but the landlord can evict you for nonpayment.
Not if you listed your landlord as a creditor on your bankruptcy petition and that there is excess property to pay your landlord after secured creditors and your exemptions. Unpaid rent is an unsecured debt. If a judgment lien is filed, you can avoid it if filed shortly before bankruptcy filing.
No. But it may still be in the court records forever, filed under the names of the parties.
Get a lawyer
Contact the employment security office you filed a claim with.
Contact the courthouse where the will was filed. They will tell you the cost of making and sending a copy if it is available.
I asked my other roommate about it and he said it was for my landlord, Meanwhile he refuses to take my rent money and he said why I didn't go to court.