Not easily. It would probably be best to accept section 8 vouchers for your rental and then you will always be guaranteed at least the voucher portion of the rent. Financing for tax credit or bond on a single family home would be pretty difficult if not impossible.
A resident does not usually owe rent to a non resident in a house owned by "tenants in common" if the resident is one of the tenants. When a house is owned by "tenants in common", all tenants share use of the house or property. If one chooses not to use it, that is his business. (Of course, what is usual may not apply in your local area. There are also ways to end a joint tenancy.)
Since the parents are divorced, the house is owned as Joint Tenants (not Tenants in the Entirity), so as Joint Tenants, the surviving parent would own half the house with the two children owning the other half. If the house is owned as Tenants in Common, which isn't as likely, then when one person dies, the other person gets the entire house.
No.
When property is owned as joint tenants with the right of survivorship the property is NOT part of the estate of the first joint owner to die.
No. Real property owned by two (or more) people as joint tenants passes automatically to the surviving joint tenant upon the death of the other.
When it is owned as tenants by the entirety or joint tenants with another person.
If the property is owned by the husband and wife as tenants by the entirety a lien for the debt of one will not affect the property.
One kind. They were tenants who worked the land for the lord who owned the manor. In return they got a house and a strip of land that they could use of their own.
That depends on how the property was titled. If the spouses owned as joint tenants with the right of survivorship or tenants by the entirety (as most married couples do) then you have no claim whatsoever. In that case, the property automatically passed to the surviving spouse. If it happens the property was owned as tenants in common then you may acquire an interest in your deceased parent's half along with the surviving spouse providing the parent didn't leave the property to their surviving spouse by will. First check the tenancy on their deed.
Someone who works and pays rent for land owned by another.
As a general rule, yes. You should consult a lawyer though to get a better answer, specific to your facts and the law of your area.
No. Property owned by three people as joint tenants with the right of survivorship cannot be "willed" at all. When one owner dies their share automatically passes to the surviving joint tenants.No. Property owned by three people as joint tenants with the right of survivorship cannot be "willed" at all. When one owner dies their share automatically passes to the surviving joint tenants.No. Property owned by three people as joint tenants with the right of survivorship cannot be "willed" at all. When one owner dies their share automatically passes to the surviving joint tenants.No. Property owned by three people as joint tenants with the right of survivorship cannot be "willed" at all. When one owner dies their share automatically passes to the surviving joint tenants.