No. When the apartment you apply for does a credit check that will show. They will not want to rent to someone who owes a previous apartment complex. Pay the previous bill first or at least make payment arrangements.
If the renter can still make payments you do nothing. If the renter defaults on more than one payment, then file for court eviction unless you want to make special arrangements with the renter.
Not unless there is a court order (example: order of protection/restraining order) that allows the action. If such an order is in place the occupant of the residence must still allow the displaced tenant to obtain his or her personal belongings. In which case, the "right to residency" issue would be addressed at the "show cause to continue" PO or no contact order hearing.
If an apartment is reserved for you, because you paid a security deposit, that means that the landlord is not able to rent it to anyone else. Hence, when you then decide not to move in after all, the landlord has still lost the rent which he might have collected by renting that apartmnent to a different renter. So yes, he can withhold the deposit. It is not a good idea to make a deposit on an apartment that you are not actually going to move into.
This means the apartment is allowing you to still live there (perhaps you settled and paid the arrears but not before the Landlord obtained a Judgment or writ of execution against you but chose not to kick you out)
no it is still on
No they are not
No. But it may still be in the court records forever, filed under the names of the parties.
no it is not still shoing on cbs
yes
I think he does
Yes but its not easy and not very likely. but there is still a chance you can.
Yes, as long as they still get enough exercise.