As far as I know, no state requires this disclosure. Many states have case law which holds that a landlord or seller is specifically not required to make such a disclosure.
Depends on the landlord and their credit requirements. Most likely, yes, but you may be required to put down additional money as a deposit.
Make another set of keys. Or just tell them that you accidently lost your extra set. * It might be wise to consider the issue of security, regardless of how remote the possiblity might be of someone being able to use them. The best option would be to tell the landlord what has happened and pay for the locks to be changed and the extra set of new keys.
If you are the Landlord you send the Tenant a certified letter stating the terms they are breaking and if you are another Tenant you should contact the Landlord or management office.
The new owner must abide by whatever agreement is in force. If there is a lease he cannot change any of the terms except by mutual agreement. If you are month-to-month he can only do this after giving you a proper written notice and anywhere from 30-90 days warning in advance, this allows you to either pay the new rental agreement, or look for another place to live. If this was not done, i'd recommend talking to a lawyer.
A Scavenger is another way of saying garbage. Typically, the property manager is responsible for it.
Typically, replacing a cosigner on a lease would require approval from the landlord or property management company, and they may have specific criteria for accepting a new cosigner. It's best to contact the landlord or property manager directly to discuss the possibility of changing the cosigner on the lease.
Resident Manager, Community Manager, Property Manager, Apartment Manager
This might differ from one person to another person.Certain things should be discussed in agrement
Yes, there is no limit to number of Apartments you can rent/cosign on. However, the new landlord may run a credit check/background check on you, if you have too much debt or cosigned on another apartment they may consider you to be roo risky to rent to.
Additional info I have been living in this apartment for 1 year in November and there is no lease. The "apartment" does not seem like an apartment from the outside, it looks like a tool shed. If a guest who has never seen it were to walk up to it, they would have no idea it is an apartment. The landlord built it himself, originally so his son could smoke pot there. Oh yea, landlord is a retired cop. Anyways, the apartment has no windows and no fire extinguisher and no smoke detectors. The kitchen and bathroom are all in one room. The only thing that separates the toilet from kitchen is a curtain. I recently lost my job and will not be able to pay rent until I find another job. I have never been late or behind on rent. Can the landlord evict me?
Ask your attorney about your local laws, but because the infestation is passing through common areas I suspect that they can be.
A tenant is a person who occupies a property, often an apartment, from another person, often known as a landlord. The tenant often pays rent for the property the tenant occupies.
Actually, there are no specific rules which prohibit anyone from talking to another person about delinquent rents, whether it be the tenant's parents, another landlord or potential landlord, or even the tenant's doctor. However, most apartment complexes and professional landlords have a strict policy against disclosing information about specific tenants without their permission, with the exception of law enforcement officers.
Yes they can, unless your state specifically prohibits this.
Close your account. Then if there is a landlord account set up, it will go to the landlord's account automatically. Otherwise the power will be cut off till someone else comes and sets up an account. If you live in an apartment, talk to the leasing office about what to do.
Disclose, make a pronouncement...
Depending on where you live your landlord may have to give you a certain number of days notice before you are required to leave the premises (unless you are putting yourself or someone else in danger). Until then, you are not the old tenant, but the current tenant and your rented property can not be handed over to another party.