No, not unless the tenant is acting as your agent to help maintain the grounds of your property. Each tenant is responsible for maintaing their own yard and thus must purchase their "tools" to keep said grounds maintained.
Gaelic Park.
Waste by the life tenant would provide grounds for terminating the life estate by a court order.
The natural demise of the lease is grounds for eviction. The process varies by state.
The security deposit should be applied to the arrearage (including any court costs), and any remainder returned to the tenant. Does the landord need to notify you how your deposit will be applied.
A lease to own tenant can be evicted from a property once their contract is expired if they have not completed the purchase. The steps to do this include establishing legal grounds for the eviction, providing the tenant with a notice of intent to evict, filing an unlawful retainer writ, and going to court.
Yes he can. A violation of the terms of a lease by a landlord is just as much grounds for termination by the tenant. The landlord can still evict you but less likely will win.
Generally a complaint like this is not enough grounds for a refund of a tenant's rent. If the neighbor is under your control (if you are his landlord as well) then you can correct the problem. If not it's a problem beyond your control and the tenant should take his own actions against the complaint (e.g., call police).
Yes, a landlord in Maryland can sue for future rent if the tenant breaks the lease agreement. However, the landlord has a duty to mitigate damages by making reasonable efforts to find a new tenant. If the landlord finds a new tenant, the tenant who broke the lease agreement will only be responsible for the rent until the new tenant moves in.
An under-tenant is a someone underneath a tenant-in-chief.
The landlord or tenant can pay for the tenant improvements
Failure to contribute to household expenses may or may not be grounds for eviction. This depends on the term of the lease. Not contributing to household expenses is the same as not paying utilities in most household situations. A landlord may not evict a tenant for not paying his utilities, just like the landlord cannot turn off utilities to force the tenant to pay his rent. Therefore, if the tenant has paid his rent on time then the landlord has no grounds for eviction. However, after proper notice, the landlord has the right to evict the tenant. Now, if you are renting a room to the tenant, then you're charging him with room and board, not rent. If that's the case, you have to spell out the terms of that agreement, any violation of which will allow you to evict him. In that case, you still have to undergo the same eviction proceedings any landlord would go through in a regular landlord/tenant relationship.