Yes.
Generally speaking, no. A landlord can only terminate a lease if the tenant violates the terms of it.
Yes. In a month-to-month tenancy at will, either party can terminate the tenancy for a reason, or for no reason. In a lease, the landlord can terminate the tenancy for several reasons, including too much noise.
This would depend upon the terms of the lease, but generally depend on why the landlord wants to terminate the lease. If the tenant violated the terms of the lease then the landlord can terminate the lease after proper warning or after proper notice is given. Otherwise the landlord has to wait until the lease expires and can choose not to renew.
Ah, yeah! Your lease does not allow you to do illegal activities.
Prior to having the tenant sign, the landlord would insert the sentence into the lease, "The landlord reserves the right to terminate this lease with ninety days notice." Tenant may request the same terms, or take the tenancy as offered.
If you are involved in a legally drawn and binding land lease contract, you cannot terminate it except by mutual consent of both you and the person to whom you granted the lease.
Yes with the proper notice a landlord can chose not to renew a lease
Lease termination letter is a letter which is written to the landlord of the current home in which you are leasing. The letter will notify the landlord that you are planning to move out from your current home.
I'm no lawyer but... In some locations there are laws that provide a landlord the ability to terminate a lease due to sale. It probably has to be an "arm's length" sale, e.g not to his wife or brother.
Once a lease is mutually agreed upon (signed by both sides) it generally must be honored. But if the landlord asked the potential new tenant if he has a criminal record, that tenant denies such, and it is found out later that he has one, yes: the landlord can terminate the lease for fraud.
Not without a reason, like some kind of a breach by the landlord.
Sure, if the tenant caused it.