A sublet does not necessarily reassign the entire lease. If the original leaseholders quit the lease, that would quit the lease of the subholders as well. If there are damages, you would have to sue the party responsible, which would be the subholders. The subholders, in turn, would have to sue the original leaseholders.
When you evict a tenant you have evicted everyone living in that unit. It's important that you add "Et al," meaning "and others" to the Defendant's name on the eviction complaint.
I don't know if this is printed in the rules, but if they don't notice and you have vacated the property, you don't have to pay.
If the tenant has abandoned the property, moved and legally ended their tenancy, if the landlord owns the mailbox, he may return the mail to the post office UNOPENED. The landlord may NOT open or keep the mail. That is the recipient's property by Federal Postal Regulations. Once the tenant has legally vacated the property, the landlord has a right to the mailbox container, its security and use. The landlord, as the owner of the property does have the right to tell the post office the recipient may no longer receive the mail, HOWEVER, he must not destroy the mail or complete a forwarding order, etc.
Real estate laws are established by the state in which the property is located. The foreclosure notice will contain all information concerning the property being vacated, sold, and whether or not the borrower has redemption rights to the property.
You need to show the person you paid the proof that the judgment has been vacated. If they refuse to repay the money, you should petition the court for an order specifically ordering them to pay the money back.
In the USA, most building owners are allowed to sell their properties, even if they are currently leased. Exceptions may include those who bought the properties through the local or Federal government, and/or have other legal (not necessarily financial) obligations with the local or Federal government to keep the property, at least, until all tenants have vacated, either by legitimate eviction (wanting to sell the property is not a legitimate cause for cancelling the terms of the lease/rental contract) or by voluntary departure of the tenant. When the property is sold, both the new landlord and the existing tenants are usually bound by the currently existing lease/rental contract, but the new owner is free to change the terms of the contract upon its renewal, or even ask the tenants to leave when their lease comes due for renewal; in such cases, the owner is obliged to give "fair notice" to the tenants (n.b., "fair notice" varies between locales; some require as little as 30 days from the time the lease is due for renewal; some as much as a year, as is the case with some apartment properties that "go condo(minium)").
My guess is that it would be mute. Nothing.
If you are referring to traffic tickets, vacated is the same as dismissed. The charge was dropped, and no conviction was entered.
the order will end when it is dated to do so or vacated by a juges ...
It could mean, well, "vacated"... that is, moved out. But if you're talking about it in the sense of "the judgement of the lower court is vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings" it means something like "made void" or "cancelled."
Yes, the US vacated the Shamsi Air Base in Pakistan, in early December 2011.
Occupy
taken out, removed