no, the realestate taxes are for the house not the land and the land-lord has to pay taxes on the land anyway.
A property owner who is renting the property out to people to live in.
The owner of the property is called the the lessor or landlord. The person who is renting the property is called the lessee or tenant.
In the situation you describe, is the landlord the sole owner, and you are a renter or lessee? If the landlord is the sole owner of the property, and you are the lessee, they remain the landlord/sole owner despite where they may live. If you are renting the property from the landlord, you are only a lessee and not a joint owner.
If you are the one renting the property you can not deduct this from your taxes. If you are the landlord you can receive a deduction on your taxes for owning the property.
No. This is an act of god. You should notify your car insurance.
Get a lawyer
Scrooge is a trader, normally in corn, money lender and landlord renting property.
It is very important for a landlord to get contents insurance if they are renting out a property with furniture included. If then the contents are damaged by the tennants then the landlord will be able to use the insurance policy to replace them.
Renters rights are also known as tenant rights: the basic rights that tenant has when renting residential property from the landlord.
Yes.
If your property is foreclosed, either you have the same landlord until the property actually changes hands, or you have a new landlord who can exercise his own rules, including evictions. If your landlord still has control over the property he can still collect rent, and he can still evict you if you don't pay it. When the new landlord takes over you must follow that landlord's instructions for rent payment or vacating the premises.
The term letting insurance refers to the insurance a landlord has for property they are renting. It covers damage to the property either through accident or natural disaster.