Yes. Usually.
No since an insurance company would not want to be liable for damage caused by the leaking roof.
In a word.... YES...... Your landlord has a duty to not cause damage to the property of others
Nobody is liable for an act of nature. Your own comprehensive auto insurance would provide coverage for damage to your vehicle from an act of nature.
That would depend on who's angry wife your talking about. If the tenants wife damages your property or your landlords property then the tenants wife is liable for those damages. Due to the extension of common law you can also be held financially liable for actions of your spouse. The landlord would have no control over the tenants wife nor her actions and could not be held liable. If the Landlords wife came over and damaged your property or the landlords property then the Landlord and or the landlord wife would be financially liable.
This varies from landlord to landlord. If you are staying in full fledged apartment, the insurance will be taken care of by the apartment owner itself. otherwise if you staying in independant house, we have take care of insurance cover for strom damage, flooding.
Yes, in certain cases the landlord may be held liable for damage caused to a neighbor's property. This is typically the case if the landlord has failed to maintain the rental property in a safe and habitable condition, or if the tenant has caused damage due to negligence. The neighbor may be able to sue the landlord for damages. To get more detailed information you can visit real estate agents like Umega in Edinburgh, who are professional estate agents in Edinburgh.
If you get an office space lease, you are not locked into purchasing a building. If in the near future you decide that you will need a larger office, you are able to move depending on the duration of the lease you have signed. You will also not be liable for any external building repairs if you are leasing the building from a landlord.
In the state of AZ can your neighbor's tree be liable for damage of your sewer?
It depends on why it fell off.If it was due to old age, a leaking roof or faulty workmanship, the landlord fixes it.If it fell down because of something that you, your family or your guests did, the landlord still fixes it, but you pay for it. The common reasons aredeliberate damage (aka vandalism).fixing something heavy to the ceiling, which pulls it down.allowing water to leak onto a floor upstairs. This could be leaving the bath running. It could also be getting a blocked toilet, then repeatedly flushing it, rather than plunging it until the blockage clears.
No. This is an act of god. You should notify your car insurance.
No, His insurance will cover his fence. Your home insurance is specific to your property and no one is liable for an act of nature,
Your landlord's insurance should take care of it. Legally your landlord is liable as they own the tree and supposedly should have had it checked and trimmed to prevent that.