Basically the same rules apply: pay the rent on time, keep property in a safe, decent, and sanitary condition. The landlord may not allow certain types of businesses to run in their commercial property, and most don't allow businesses to be run in residential properties.
Then the tenancy is subject to the application of state or local landlord/tenant laws on a month-to-month tenancy.
Sure, if the tenant caused it.
In most states this is prohibited in a residential landlord/tenant rule.
It would be called a Residential Rental Agreement, Residential Lease, Month-to-Month Tenancy Agreement, or something to that effect. The name varies widely.
In the UK, an assured tenancy is the usual form of letting if:· you are a private landlord and your tenant is a private tenant;· the tenancy began on or after 15 January 1989;· the house or flat is let as separate accommodation and is the tenant's main home.
Tenant management organizations are set up in the United Kingdom. They allow certain residents to take responsibility for running their own home.
A tenant at sufferance is a person who remains on a property after their lease or rental agreement has expired without the landlord's permission. They may be occupying the property unlawfully and can be evicted by the landlord. This type of tenancy is also referred to as a holdover tenancy.
The Landlord Tenant Act is the rights and responsibilities of landlords and tenants. General obligation of tenants and landlords. It also governs the rental of commercial and residential property.
In general, you can grant a lease whenever you like, but the lease can't begin until after the existing one expires. You must take care to give the required notice to the old tenant, otherwise the lease will probably automatically become a month-to-month tenancy. Caution. This answer is for residential properties; rules for commercial properties vary from place to place.
The legal responsibilities of a cosigner on a lease agreement are the same as the tenant without the benefit of tenancy.
The burden is on the tenant to prove that they paid.
A tenancy at suffrage is another name for a tenancy at will. It means that the tenant is occupying the property with the permission of the owner but without a lease. It is usually used to describe a tenant who continues to occupy the property after a lease has expired and the owner continues to accept the rent payments.