Call the police in most cases. This type of action is called an illegal eviction. He cannot change locks until a judge has issued a writ of possession of property, and only if he hires a deputy sheriff to remove you from the premises.
Yes, it is their house now, not yours.
It is an eviction.
The owner can begin eviction actions against you.
The owner can begin eviction actions against you.
Procedure should be in owner's manual. Maybe there should be, but there is no such information in it.
Evicting an owner from a condominium is the job of a sheriff when the bank has foreclosed on the mortgage and the owner remains in residence. Otherwise, threatening a resident owner with eviction could be considered harassment. However, yours may be a special case. If you are being threatened with eviction, best practices dictate that you contact a common-interest-community-savvy attorney and take your eviction threats into a consultation so that you can better understand your options.
The home owner of course. Tenants have tenant´s rights such as 30 day notice before eviction etc., but the home owner owns it.
The HOA should consult a real estate attorney immediately. Any "self help" actions by the HOA could have severe consequences: that is, the evicted renter could sue the HOA for constructive eviction.
If an eviction has already occurred, then that means your mortgage note was in default for quite some time and most likely the home already has a new owner. It would be too late to salvage the house by the time an eviction has already been carried out.
The legal owner or their representative, or the holder of a lease agreement can force eviction.
If you are living in a property owned by another business or person, no. You have to contact the property owner and have them change the locks (or provide you with the new locks so you can change them). If you are the property owner and there is a person renting you can only change the locks after you've notified the renter about the change in writing. If you have evicted the renter and they refuse to leave/turn in keys or there is no renter then you can change the locks at will.
no