Generally, in most cases the landlord must give you some time to correct any violations of the terms of a lease. If the violation is severe enough or repeated then the landlord has the right to evict you with a short notice.
Get StartedThe Late Rent Notice is designed to be used by a landlord/manager of rental units, to prompt a tenant to pay delinquent rent. If the tenant does not pay within the allotted time, the landlord/manager may begin the process of ending the rental agreement and evicting the tenant, using the procedures specified by state and/or local law.The person preparing and signing this letter must be the landlord or be an employee or representative of the landlord. If any other person (for example, the landlord's attorney) signs this notice, you may be required to comply with the stringent requirements of the
No. If the property is about to be foreclosed, the landlord has no obligation to give the tenant any notice of anything. After the foreclosure, the landlord will have nothing to do with the tenant.
Tenant rights if my lease has expired and I am giving the landlord a 30 notice to vacate,can I be evicted?
is the landlord required to take care of te landscaping before tenant moves in
If the landlord provided a key to the tenant, then the tenant must provide a key to the landlord. In fact, under most state laws the tenant may not change a lock without the landlord's permission and a duplicate key provided to the landlord.
Not sure why this would be a landlord/tenant issue, since the landlord can sell to anyone he or she wants and the tenant simply continues paying rent, but to a different landlord. The only "notice" required would be when the new landlord wants the rent sent to a different place or wants to change the terms of the tenancy (usually with 30 days prior notice, unless otherwise specified in a lease).
It can mean where an estoppel certificate is required of a landlord (they can are also sometimes required of the tenant), where the landlord is required to make certain representations regarding the state of the lease (neither tenant nor landlord are in default), the state of the underlying property (e.g. no encumbrances, or no default on mortgage, or no condemnation proceedings) or other representations at the request of a lender (to the landlord or the tenant) or a buyer of the property.
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.
It is a lease violation and you should refer to landlord tenant laws for your state to determine what your options are. Possibly a notice to comply.
no
Nothing. The landlord need only give you the notice required by law (20 days in WA) and then simply move back in. The exception is if you have a lease--in that case, the landlord must honor the term of the lease unless the landlord and tenant mutually agree to break the lease. In that case, the tenant is free to demand compensation of the landlord for the landlord's breaking the lease.
Not really: a landlord can reclaim their property at the end of a lease-- no material reason needed-- or give notice to a month-to-month tenant (or week-to-week, if applicable).