Break in
No. A tenant has no ownership interest in the property and so the property is not available to their creditors.No. A tenant has no ownership interest in the property and so the property is not available to their creditors.No. A tenant has no ownership interest in the property and so the property is not available to their creditors.No. A tenant has no ownership interest in the property and so the property is not available to their creditors.
That would depend on the terms of the lease.
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.
Yes, unless there is some zoning restriction.
No.
An overlease is a lease agreement between a tenant and a subtenant, where the subtenant leases the property from the tenant who is already leasing the property from the landlord. It allows the original tenant to sublet the property to another party.
Tenant and lessee are the same thing, they are a person who rents property from a lessor who own property that he wants to lease.
Every state has its own laws regarding what to do with personal property of an evicted tenant. You'll need to check with your state's rules.
"It depends". If the tenant just locked the doors and left at the end of a lease, gave you the keys, and said nothing about the items, the facts say the tenant intentionally abandoned the items and you can do with them what you want unless your state law says otherwise. If the tenant said anything, that's different. If the lease is not over and the tenant is expected back, that may also be different. You state may have specific laws about abandoned property too.
Well, what do you mean by Landlord Insurance? There is property insurance and Tenant or Renter's Insurance. The former covers any damage to the property by a storm, fire, burglary, etc., but not anything inside the unit, meaning, anything owned by the tenant. That's what Tenant insurance is for. Tenant insurance covers any property of the Tenant, in and out of the home (out of the home is generally covered by only 10 %); property damage by the Tenant, either while living there or upon moveout; and medical care of up to about $1,000 to anyone who gets hurt in your home. It also covers loss of use of the home to a certain amount, which helps you with lodging and moving costs should you need to stay out of the home.
A landlord is generally a person owns property for rent. A tenant is someone who rents property from a landlord.
A tenant is a person who occupies a property, often an apartment, from another person, often known as a landlord. The tenant often pays rent for the property the tenant occupies.