yes. you arer under contractual obligation to pay regardless of what is happening with the landlord
If you are paying rent it is a debit. If you are a landlord receiving rent its a credit.
No. (not in California, at least) They can evict you but there is a legal procedure for that and it does not start with being locked out. Aside from your legal rights, understand that paying rent is your responsibility and it is very unfair to live there and not pay so have some sympathy for your landlord.
An eviction definitely! With a broken lease, you are still paying your landlord the rent that you own him and will probably be paying a fee to break the lease. With an evicition, the renter probably has stopped paying the rent or has damaged the property or has been doing something illegal like growing marijuana on the property.
a landlord can evict you for non-payment of rent or being consistantly late paying,,, disruptive behaviour, drug abuse, loud noise after 11pm, filthy premises, and too many people living there, these are the main reasons for an eviction. Another reason although not a common one is when the landlord wants the unit for his own use or for a person in his family.
I'm not familiar with laws specific to Missouri, but the general answer is yes, there are many circumstances under which the landlord may enter the property. If the tenant is not paying rent, the landlord will start the eviction process and has the right to show the property to the next tenant. The landlord is still bound by all the pre-existing restrictions after the tenant is late in payment, he/she is not free to come during the middle of the night or some other combative action.
Your payment may have to go directly to the bank if they have taken possession. You should contact the bank with this question!!!
Not until there is a foreclosure sale.
You could try, but the fact is, you owed him that rent up until the day the foreclosure sale happened. Whether or not he is paying the mortgage has nothing to do with your obligation to pay the rent. By federal law (and most states have even stronger laws) the bank should have given you plenty of time to move.
This was the case for us during the early 1990's. Our rental home went into foreclosure. We stopped paying rent, stayed in the house for another 2 1/2 months, and then moved.
If you are not paying rent - yes, absolutely the landlord can. If you aren't paying rent, your "refusal" has no legs to stand on.
Yes.
foreclosure is when a business is shut down because they are not selling their products or they are doing paying the bills.
By paying your mortgage payments on time.
All three owners are equally responsible for paying the mortgage and the foreclosure will affect all owners equally. You can avoid foreclosure by paying the mortgage.
Yes, by paying the back payments. Also, filing bankruptcy prior to the foreclosure will normally put a hold on the foreclosure proceedings.
Yes, if one got the loan after foreclosure proceedings began. When banks make credit decisions, they want to consider as much up-to-date information as possible. If a foreclosure is coming up but is not on the credit report, the bank may grant the loan. Once the foreclosure shows up on the report, the bank will conduct due diligence and see if they would have granted the loan knowing about the foreclosure. Most banks would not and will call the loan, making you responsible for paying immediately.
That has nothing to do with the tenant.