In some states, the lease survives the sale; in others, it does not. Regardless, the landlord certainly has the right to sell.
Buying is a personal investment while renting involves giving money to the landlord
Unless you had an agreement with the landlord to that effect, no. If you repainted it because you just wanted a different color, then it's not likely.
Section 8 usually does not allow renting out of rooms within the same house.
Yes. The relationship between the landlord and bank has nothing to do with the tenant.
AnswerThe terms are whatever the landlord and tenant agreed upon either verbally or in written contract when the rental or lease agreement took effect. Still, the landlord of either type of housing is responsible for its being liveable (water, electrical hookups) and safe. Regulations may differ by locale.
Yes, a landlord can redecorate and fix the house for selling while the current tenants are still renting and living there, as long as it does not disrupt the tenant's right to quiet enjoyment and does not violate any terms specified in the lease agreement. The landlord should communicate with the tenants in advance about any planned renovations or repairs and try to schedule them at a convenient time for the tenants.
You do have some legal rights when renting a house. The house should be clean and liveable, the landlord should tell you when he is coming over to fix the house, the landlord cannot have the locks changed.
Yes.
If your landlord is selling the house you have to continue paying the rent for it, whether to the old landlord or to the new one. Your old landlord will give you notice about when they have sold the property, and the new landlord will give you instructions on how to pay them the rent.
"Buying is a personal investment while renting involves giving money to the landlord"
A landlord is a person who owns one or more houses and/or apartments and rents them out to other people. If you are renting a house or an apartment rather than buying it, the person you pay your rent to is the landlord.
Your landlord , end of discussion.
What a landlord verifies is completely up to the landlord
When you buy a house, you just need to pay one lump sum. There will be no additional charges unlike renting a house which may eventually be more expensive than buying a house alltogether. Also, when you buy a house, you can redecorate freely rather thn waiting for the Landlord giving you permission
Buying is a personal investment while renting involves giving money to the landlord
The landlord should be responsible for everything in the house (example: Refrigerator, stove, water heater, floor, etc) if it was to not function properly or was damaged . But if it was neglected or abused by your actions, then it would be your responsibility.
Unless you had an agreement with the landlord to that effect, no. If you repainted it because you just wanted a different color, then it's not likely.