No. Personal mail is protected by law. No person may access or interfere with another person's mail.
Section 13.411. Tampering with mail.
Tampering with mail is wilfully opening, destroying, damaging, or taking into possession without the express or implied consent of the sender or addressee a postcard, letter, package, envelope or parcel entrusted by the sender to another for delivery to a third person. This section does not apply to a person employed by a postal, government, or private courier service who acts in good faith in performance of his official duties. Tampering with mail is a category three misdemeanor.
Tenants have the right to complain about other tenants that are disruptive. If the landlord fails to act, then the tenants may take their complaint to the government department that that oversees Landlord Tenant disputes. This department has the authority to compell the landlord to take action if they can't or won't do it on their own.
Right of quiet enjoyment.
It is the landlord's responsibility to ensure tenants' safety, as well as "reasonable enjoyment" of their rental unit. Therefore, if you feel you are in danger from other tenants, and your landlord will not remove those tenants, you have the right to move out. HOWEVER, be sure you give your landlord WRITTEN notice stating your reasons for moving, and backing those reasons up with documentation! In fact, I would suggest you contact a lawyer specializing in landlord/tenant issues for further advice.
Yes. A landlord has the right to set any guidelines he or she chooses regarding who stays in their home. If the prospective tenants don't like it, they can find somewhere else to stay. Landlords run the show, not the prospective tenants.
As long as the landlord still has control over the property he has the right to collect rent on it and evict non-paying tenants.
Yes, depending on when. A landlord has his name, telephone number, and hours for calling on the lease. Unless there is an emergency the landlord has the right to ask the Tenant not to call the number outside those hours if it's not an emergency.
In a month-to-month tenancy at will, the landlord can raise the rent by giving notice that the current tenancy will be terminated at the end of the next month, and that, if the tenants want to stay after that, the rent will be more. Today is May 11. If the rent is due on the first of each month, and if landlord gives notice on or before May 31, then the tenants are obligated to leave at the end of June, or pay the new rent on July 1.
Yes, a landlord can redecorate and fix the house for selling while the current tenants are still renting and living there, as long as it does not disrupt the tenant's right to quiet enjoyment and does not violate any terms specified in the lease agreement. The landlord should communicate with the tenants in advance about any planned renovations or repairs and try to schedule them at a convenient time for the tenants.
Bankruptcy has nothing to do with the tenants, and is not a reason for them to vacate. However, in any state except New Jersey, with a month-to-month tenancy, the landlord has the right to ask the tenant to leave at the end of the next rental period.
The Landlord rents you space if you agree to follow the rules, if he/she says ''No Cows" and you bring a cow, they have the right to remove itAnother View: The question reads like the former tenants (who owned the livestock) are no longer tenants and left their animals. If that is the case it becomes a case of 'abandoned property." The landlord will have to comply with the laws concerning abandoned property that are in effect in his municipality or state.
Bankruptcy has nothing to do with the tenant. If a bank forecloses on the mortgage, US federal law requires the bank to give the tenants a 90 day notice to quit, if they want the building emptied. But, it could be that the landlord will survive the bankruptcy, and there will be no foreclosure.
The Landlord has the right to seize the belongings and sell them if he wishes. Most of the time, however, they just put out the belongings out to the curb.