Prior to having the tenant sign, the landlord would insert the sentence into the lease, "The landlord reserves the right to terminate this lease with ninety days notice." Tenant may request the same terms, or take the tenancy as offered.
Sure, lots of leases say that. However, it should go both ways - the landlord should be required to give 60 days notice if the want to terminate the tenancy.
Yes. If the rent is on a written lease then the lease must expire, and the landlord must give at least 30-days notice before the lease expires. If the rent is on a month-to-month basis, then the landlord must give a 30-day notice before the next rent is due. If the rent is on a weekly basis then the notice must be given at least one week before the rent is due.
This depends on how serious or repetitious the violation is. A landlord can give you some time to correct the violation or can ask you to leave. If the landlord chooses the latter, he can choose not to renew the lease, terminate it with some notice, such as 30 days or less, or terminate it immediately by means of an eviction (an eviction is actually a court proceeding, not just a request for you to move. If you move per the request without the matter heading to court you will not have an eviction record, which could jeopardize your housing choice voucher if you have one and your ability to get into another home).
30 days in writing if by notice you mean eviction
"I live in and {APARTMENT} here in {MANCHESTER, KY} and all of the notice that I have to give my landlady is a 30 day notice."
This would depend upon the terms of the lease, but generally depend on why the landlord wants to terminate the lease. If the tenant violated the terms of the lease then the landlord can terminate the lease after proper warning or after proper notice is given. Otherwise the landlord has to wait until the lease expires and can choose not to renew.
Yes with the proper notice a landlord can chose not to renew a lease
Yes. In a month-to-month tenancy at will, either party can terminate the tenancy for a reason, or for no reason. In a lease, the landlord can terminate the tenancy for several reasons, including too much noise.
Dear _____________________ : The Landlord/Tenant Act requires me to give you written notice __________ days prior to the end of the lease that the lease will be terminated. This is written notice of my intent to have you vacate the premises on or before ___________. You may contact me at ________________________ should you have any questions. Sincerely, (landlord)
You are given the allotted amount of time given on the notice to vacate the premises. If you do not vacate the premises then the landlord can start eviction proceedings against you.
Absolutely! A 30 day notice has to be given in such cases before the landlord can file eviction proceedings.
Sure, lots of leases say that. However, it should go both ways - the landlord should be required to give 60 days notice if the want to terminate the tenancy.
With the exception of New Jersey, any state allows a tenant or landlord to terminate a tenancy with a full rental period notice, for no reason.
Given proper notice, a landlord can evict you for whatever reason. He could opt not to renew your lease if you have one, or otherwise terminate your residency with proper notice.
Not without a reason, like some kind of a breach by the landlord.
Normally the landlord must give at least a 30-day notice before the expiration of the lease that he will not renew it, so the tenant must leave. There is one exception: if the tenant is in violation of the terms of the lease, the landlord may terminate the lease and give such short notice for the tenant to leave.
I am assuming you mean that there is a cause for eviction (non-payment of rent, unruly behaviour, etc.) If so, then you will need to (retain an attorney to) file an unlawful detainer action against the tenant. Note that a 3 day notice is required before filing such a lawsuit--talk to your attorney for more info.