It may not effect your ability to engage in a contract, but it will effect the likeliness of a contractor wanting to sign a lease with you. Commercial evictions are typically listed on your credit report and this negatively effects the likelihood of any perspective business relationships.
If you have been clean from eviction in those 6 years then you should be OK. If you went back and lived with parents or relatives then say so. Be honest and tell them you had difficulties at work and it was a bad time for you if that was the case. They may ask for the company name where you are working just to verify you have an income. There should be no problems. Marcy
A commercial lease should be recorded in the land records.A commercial lease should be recorded in the land records.A commercial lease should be recorded in the land records.A commercial lease should be recorded in the land records.
Yes, and even your ability to get a lease. Because of the lower down payment, a lease may be harder to get than normal car financing.
It all depends on what kind of notice your are referring to. In most cases it probably involves eviction. In this case always refer to the lease. It will specify the conditions for the notice. If the lease is not clear or poorly written in this area then follow the letter of the law in the state the notice is to be given regarding evictions and seek legal council.
A car lease is an individuals person lease for their car. A commercial car lease is the lease for a commercial vehicle which are used for businesses.
The natural demise of the lease is grounds for eviction. The process varies by state.
You can only lose your section 8 voucher if you violate the terms of your lease, the landlord files eviction proceedings against you, and wins a judgment against you for eviction.
An eviction definitely! With a broken lease, you are still paying your landlord the rent that you own him and will probably be paying a fee to break the lease. With an evicition, the renter probably has stopped paying the rent or has damaged the property or has been doing something illegal like growing marijuana on the property.
You would need to file a lawsuit against them for a legal eviction. I strongly advise that you retain an attorney to do this. If you win your lawsuit, then the sheriff will forcefully remove them from the premises.
Wait, I misunderstood your question, do you want an eviction on your record? It will be harder to get another apartment in the future and it stays on your permanent record. So, If you are not paying rent and you have no lease and you think the eviction will give you some spare time you are right but it will screw up your future. You should talk to your landlord and do it amicably.
A person can obtain a commercial lease agreement by asking their landlord to create one. After this is done, a commercial lease between the tenant and the landlord will be made.
This depends on how serious or repetitious the violation is. A landlord can give you some time to correct the violation or can ask you to leave. If the landlord chooses the latter, he can choose not to renew the lease, terminate it with some notice, such as 30 days or less, or terminate it immediately by means of an eviction (an eviction is actually a court proceeding, not just a request for you to move. If you move per the request without the matter heading to court you will not have an eviction record, which could jeopardize your housing choice voucher if you have one and your ability to get into another home).