Rights and obligations vary depending on where you live but they always include the right to the use and possession of the property for the duration of the life tenant's natural life.
Tenant Right League was created in 1850.
No. The life tenant has the right to the use and possession of the property for life.No. The life tenant has the right to the use and possession of the property for life.No. The life tenant has the right to the use and possession of the property for life.No. The life tenant has the right to the use and possession of the property for life.
Generally a joint tenant has a right of survivorship in the property. That means if the other joint tenant dies their interest in the real estate passes automatically to the surviving joint tenant with no need of probate.Generally a joint tenant has a right of survivorship in the property. That means if the other joint tenant dies their interest in the real estate passes automatically to the surviving joint tenant with no need of probate.Generally a joint tenant has a right of survivorship in the property. That means if the other joint tenant dies their interest in the real estate passes automatically to the surviving joint tenant with no need of probate.Generally a joint tenant has a right of survivorship in the property. That means if the other joint tenant dies their interest in the real estate passes automatically to the surviving joint tenant with no need of probate.
A trespass by a tenant would occur if the tenant entered an area they had no right to enter such as another tenant's unit, garage or storage space.
It depends. If the sub-tenant was there by right and the landlord allowed a sub-lease, then that's a situation where nothing has gone wrong. If the landlord is suing, it sounds instead like the tenant did not have the right to sublet and in that case they are responsible to complete the lease and the sub-tenant may not have had the right to be there.
yes
No, a tenant has the right to have a visitor. If the visitor is committing a crime, then the co- tenant has the right to call police. If the general conditions are unfavorable for the cotenants they should move. Generally, cotenants do not have the same obligations under a lease as does a main tenant.
Whether a tenant is disabled does not have a bearing on whether he can be evicted. If a PHA has the right to evict a tenant then it can evict such person regardless of disability.
The answer is no. Property owned with another person as joint tenants with the right of survivorship passes automatically to the co-owner when you die. You cannot bequeath your interest in that property in your will. It does not become part of your estate.
If the person has the legal right to live there on a month-to-month basis, he is a tenant. But we are presuming that you, the landlord, didn't rent the unit out to this person: perhaps your tenant did, known as subleasing. If you, the landlord, allowed this, then you have to have your tenant evict the sub-tenant. If you didn't allow this, then you have to enforce the terms of the lease, and make your tenant correct this problem immediately or you can evict him, which automatically forces the sub-tenant out.
I can only answer for Massachusetts, but I think you can. The landlord has a right of entry, but he should get the permission of tenant, and the tenant has a right to be there at the time. If the landlord needs to get in during an emergency, perhaps he should be calling the police.
Normally the bankruptcy filing has nothing to do with whether or not the tenant has paid his rent. A landlord does not have the right to evict a tenant simply because the tenant filed chapter 7 unless that is part of the lease. The terms of the lease determine if the tenant will be evicted. If the tenant pays the rent, he should not be evicted.