Every place has a Building Code Enforcer. City Offices, Building Codes or Building Code Enforcement. City Health Department or just call the information number for your city and they can tell you who to contact.
Check the tax appraisal records for the property and see who is listed as the owner.
Depends. Is the object a tree branch? Then possibly the owner of the apartment complex. If it is something that doesn't belong in a tree then it would depend on how that object got there.
Yes, if the owner of the complex has given the police written permission to issue tickets on the property.
definitely yes. and especially in Michigan. Not in Texas unless the registered owner receives a certified letter from the apartment complex giving a 10 day warning prior to being towed.
An apartment building suggests there is one owner in a single building, large or small with common sized units and layouts. Neighbium – Integrates all-inclusive society management features in one powerful application.
A condo is owned privately even if it is being rented the owner is renting it. Apartments are owned by businesses and are considered a business. They rent the apartment out to multiple people and that is how they do business.
There is no universal answer to your question because that would be a contractual matter between the owner and the employee. You would need to research any particular apartment complex for your answer for that facility only.
Buying an apartment complex is one thing; charging rent is another. No one can force a landlord to allocate any rent received to go toward the loan payment for the complex owner.
In the real estate field proprietary management would be when a place is under control of the owner of the property .Example "If you own and run an apartment complex".
It is not illegal but it is up to the landlord or owner of the complex to decide whether or not they want to allow this. Check with them before doing any work. Some are very anal about oil spills and whatnot.
Ask the house owner
It is the decision of the owner of the property whether he wants to create a smoke free environment for the tenants. It is very difficult for any landlord to be able to enforce a rule against smoking in one's own apartment. As a tenant you have the right to make your own apartment smoke free.