I cant pay this much amount as a rent becose this houe is too big for me.
Legally, a life tenant is someone who has rights to the house only during their lifetime. A life tenant cannot leave the house to anyone by will because they do not have complete rights to the house.
Yes.
Yes, in case of emergency (flood, etc.). If no emergency, landlord is still entitled to come in just to look around if he gives the tenant 12 hours notice (at least in Florida). Of course,that is not to say the landlord should be popping in every week!
Every state has a website to which you can log in and view tenant/landlord laws. Often times a legal aid organization has landlord/tenant laws publications you can view on their website and obtain a copy of.
Janet Portman has written: 'California tenants' rights' -- subject(s): Landlord and tenant, Popular works 'Every tenant's legal guide' -- subject(s): Landlord and tenant, Popular works 'Every landlord's guide to finding great tenants' -- subject(s): Landlord and tenant, Popular works, Rental housing 'Leasing Space for Your Small Business (Negotiate the Best Lease for Your Business)' 'First-time landlord' -- subject(s): Rental housing, Real estate management, Management, Landlord and tenant
Is it's huds responsibility to repaint an apt every-time a tenant moves out
Normally the bankruptcy filing has nothing to do with whether or not the tenant has paid his rent. A landlord does not have the right to evict a tenant simply because the tenant filed chapter 7 unless that is part of the lease. The terms of the lease determine if the tenant will be evicted. If the tenant pays the rent, he should not be evicted.
Normally not: every bill in the tenant's name is that tenant's responsibility, not of the landlord.
In every state I know of, yes.
If the hallway light is controlled by the tenant, i.e., the tenant pays the electric bill which controls that light, then the tenant has every right to keep that light on or off as he wishes. If you live in an interior apartment building, the common hallway lighting of it should be controlled by the apartment complex, not by the tenant.
i was a landlord in PA trying to evict a tenant who filed for chapter 7 to avoid eviction. Only thing i could do was petition the courts for a relief from stay of bankruptcy to continue with the eviction. Without doing that, the tenant would be protected under bankruptcy law. However, getting the relief from the court can take a month or longer. The alternative is to wait it out until the bankruptcy discharges or gets dismissed, then you can continue with the eviction. Good luck if you have a smart tenant, they will find every loop hole like mine did. It seems like tenants have more rights than landlords.
No, the emergency number 911 is not the same in every country. Different countries have different emergency numbers, such as 999 in the United Kingdom and 112 in many European countries.