IF you need the address to deliver the rent...the address or place they want you to pay rent should be specified on your lease or rental agreement. IF they wanted you to know where they lived...they would have let you know that. What makes you think that just because they entrust you with their property..that you should be privy to their place of residence?
An absentee landlord is one who does not live on the premises. For example, if you rent the top floor of a townhouse and the landlord lives two towns over, then he is an absentee landlord. If he lives downstairs from you, then he is not an absentee landlord. Some people prefer absentee landlords because they think that one that lives in the same building will complain about every minor offense or imagined wrong that you do.
Get a copy of the local landlord/tenant laws and regulations and find any that you believe the landlord is violating. Your attorney can advise you where to go from there.
A new landlord has to have received the security deposit from the old landlord during the process of the closure of the sale of the property. The new landlord is responsible for that security deposit.
You can sue the landlord for slander.
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.
A Landlord may find insurance for their rental property at a number of insurance agencies offering landlord insurance. Some companies offering landlord insurance include AAMI, Suncorp, Gio and Allianz.
There are many insurance providers which can provide landlord insurance. You can find some information online at www.simplelandlordsinsurance.com/ or www.comparethemarket.com/home-insurance/landlord-insurance/
It is unseemly that a landlord can charge a tenant for other than the items listed in the lease. You can pay them and take your landlord to landlord-tenant court for reimbursement, or you can approach a landlord-tenant advocacy to find the answer that you want.
Visit the apartment or contact the landlord.
They owed the Lord (landlord) their labor, taxes, and lives. They were a tenant on the land and not the owner of land so what they grew belonged to the landlord. Everything they did they owed to the landlord. They had to get permission to marry, pay a tax when dead, and if they wanted to hunt had to get permission.
They owed the Lord (landlord) their labor, taxes, and lives. They were a tenant on the land and not the owner of land so what they grew belonged to the landlord. Everything they did they owed to the landlord. They had to get permission to marry, pay a tax when dead, and if they wanted to hunt had to get permission.
They owed the Lord (landlord) their labor, taxes, and lives. They were a tenant on the land and not the owner of land so what they grew belonged to the landlord. Everything they did they owed to the landlord. They had to get permission to marry, pay a tax when dead, and if they wanted to hunt had to get permission.