A landlord can evict a tenant for any reason he wants, except reasons that are retaliatory or discriminatory. The reasons can include, but not limit to: Non-payment of rent Property conversion or transfer of ownership Violation of the terms of the lease, serious or repititious (two within the year) Arrest Nuisance to neighbors
If the landlord and tenant have a binding lease together then the landlord cannot evict the tenant without a valid reason, that being the violation of the terms of the lease, which may include, but not limited to, nonpayment of rent. If the landlord no longer wants the tenant living in this property, he can simply decide not to renew the lease and give the tenant the proper notice of such refusal, so that the tenant can find a new place. This law applies in just about every state.
If the rent is unpaid, tenants are causing reoccuring disturbances or if the home is being condemned. These are all examples of circumstance that will cause a landlord to evict a tenant.
not paying rent.
If your landlord evicted you he has the right to tell another party, such as a potential renter, that he evicted you. He may not tell another person that he will or is about to evict you.
Yes they can, unless your state specifically prohibits this.
yes
Unfortunately, if a dying person doesn't have the money to pay their rent, they can be evicted. The dying person should try and appeal to the landlord or make their case known to the press. A person can take a few years to die, not all fatal problems are quick, some can take a long time.
A business cannot file a chapter 13. But a person can be evicted if he does not pay rent.
To get kicked out or put out of. For example, to be removed or told to leave a property by a landlord. "Mrs Smith was evicted from her house for not paying the rent".
Not necessarily: he can have an agent substitute for him.
Yes. This practice is called subleasing. If the landlord doesn't allow for subleasing then the tenant can be evicted.
Yes, after you are out a landlord can do anything with items you leave behind.
Yes.
I dont know about this question but i am a 15th prestige on call of duty
This should have been disclosed when the landlord performed the background check, before the lease was signed. Well, if the landlord had an application for an apartment to which the tenant denied having been evicted if there were questions that asked such, then the landlord can terminate the lease for the tenant having falsified the information given.