This is somewhat you mean by owing rent. If you were evicted for nonpayment of rent than the landlord could sue you for the money you owe in back rent. Since there was no lease involved, your landlord cannot sue for future rent.
You never stop owing rent for the time you live in a persons premises unless you've lawfully vacated. If you stop paying rent to the point of eviction, the landlord is still owed all that money. Plus, the landlord is now entitled to cover his court costs, attorneys fees (that are reasonable), and interest on the outstanding rent.
You owe rent for every single day you live on the property, regardless of whether you're under eviction.
Yes. You would owe any unpaid rent until the time of the eviction.
Certainly. If you are being evicted, you had to have breached the lease from the beginning. But be aware, many of the aspects of the lease you are still held to, like damage repair or other things that are within the lease. It doesnt remove the laws and requirements of your obligations as agreed upon within the lease. It just means you tenancy is comming to an end here shortly.
No if you are evicted you do not live there anymore and there for don't have to pay rent.
There is more information that would not fit in the question box. I know that it can be taken to court to claim the fees, but in the lease is a part that I am unclear on. Responsibility for rent after default. If you move out, remove property in preparing to move out or give oral or written notice of intent to move out before the lease term or renewal period ends, or you are judicially evicted or move out when we demand because you have defaulted, you are still obligated to pay rent through the remainder of the lease term or renewal period until we are able to find a replacement tent. If the lease is broken would not this part of the lease be null and void?
I would read your lease and see what the evictions clauses are or check with your local government and ask what the eviction laws are in your state.
if you have a lease you will leave when the lease is finished, if you are on a month to month agreement , the landlord must give you a written notice for you to move within 2 months, if the landlord wants you evicted, they can only do that through a court order with a bailiff present, if you have not paid your rent or are in arrears the landlord has every right to remove you from the premises, this being said, they will still need an eviction notice, also your credit will be toast.,
You should be able to, as long as she's the one originally on the lease. They will assume that if she could pay rent alone, then she could do it just as easily with you living there. It also depends on why you were evicted. LATE RENT= Shouldn't be a problem. POLICE ACTION, COMPLAINTS= Not a chance. Good luck.
A tenant can be evicted for habitually paying their rent late. In Massachusetts, being late twice in twelve months is grounds for eviction.
No. the lease was probably backed by a bank or by the automaker.
Anybody can file for bankruptcy.
if a person is disabled with a 7 year old son in low income housing in Maine can he still be evicted due 2 a former spouse that has been charged with a felony and was told that he and son have to move out to.
No, you are still obligated to pay your rent for the term of the lease
The security deposit should be applied to the arrearage (including any court costs), and any remainder returned to the tenant. Does the landord need to notify you how your deposit will be applied.