Check and see if your lease says anything about this. If the lease is silent on this issue, you would have a strong argument that the landlord has no right to force you to move.
what can a landlord charge to move in a California house rental?
depends on your landlord. also depends on if you rent before the old rentors have left.
Not automatically. Oftentimes the new landlord can keep a tenant or opt to ask him to move out.
no
Nothing. The landlord need only give you the notice required by law (20 days in WA) and then simply move back in. The exception is if you have a lease--in that case, the landlord must honor the term of the lease unless the landlord and tenant mutually agree to break the lease. In that case, the tenant is free to demand compensation of the landlord for the landlord's breaking the lease.
Normally landlords don't force their tenants to move simply because they are selling the property. The landlord has the right to ask you to move at any time with the proper notice given, UNLESS you are in a lease. When the lease expires it could be renewed or terminated.
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.,
It's a three-day notice: pay your rent or move out. If you do neither, your landlord has the right to evict you.
You cannot really sue your landlord for unfit habitation. If your rental unit is deemed unfit for habitation you may simply move out. If you are in the middle of the lease, and the dwelling is unfit for habitation, you have the right to move out under what is known as constructive eviction, meaning that you are abandoning the premises because you cannot live there. Your landlord may try to keep the security deposit if he is holding one for you. You must then sue the landlord to reclaim it.
Your only options are either move out or go along with the landlord.
Kindly ask the landlord to move it.
The landlord may not raise the rent during the lease but after it expires, that's different. Many areas have rent control so check for that first. If there is, then the increase should be within that limit or else you can appeal to the Rent Control Board. If there is no rent control, then the landlord may be free to raise it as much as he wants. If he's asking more than it's worth, move.