The keys.
The rent of an apartment can be raised as often and as high as the landlord feels like. All he has to do, is give prior notice to the tenants.
Feudal tenants are the folks who rent betterments from a feudal landlord.
Actually, this can be a requirement from your landlord.
A landlord can rent out his own home if desired, unless local laws prohibit this. If he does this then he may no longer qualify for homestead exemption on his real estate taxes. A landlord can also rent out rooms or other parts of the house to tenants if they so agree.
Bankruptcy has nothing to do with the tenant. If a bank forecloses on the mortgage, US federal law requires the bank to give the tenants a 90 day notice to quit, if they want the building emptied. But, it could be that the landlord will survive the bankruptcy, and there will be no foreclosure.
In a month-to-month tenancy at will, the landlord can raise the rent by giving notice that the current tenancy will be terminated at the end of the next month, and that, if the tenants want to stay after that, the rent will be more. Today is May 11. If the rent is due on the first of each month, and if landlord gives notice on or before May 31, then the tenants are obligated to leave at the end of June, or pay the new rent on July 1.
Generally, the landlord should not be getting rent from two tenants at the same time for the same unit.
There are six types of tenants. These are the following: 1. Cash Tenants- tenants who pay cash as rent in the plot that they work on. 2. Share of produce Tenants- tenants who give a part of their product as rent 3. Rent-free Tenants- tenants who don't pay rent and work for free 4. Cash and Fixed Amount of Produced Tenants- tenants who give cash and a fixed quantity as rent on the people they work as tenants 5. Cash and Share of Produced Tenants- tenants who give cash and a share of their product as rent. 6. I dont remember anymore but I hope this will help.
The administrator can now act as the landlord, including collecting rent or evicting tenants.
For the purposes of answering this question, I presume that the tenant is a rental tenant and that the Landlord is under foreclosure. Tenant must continue to pay the rent to the landlord as long as they have control over the property. The Foreclosing company, once it takes over, must give the tenant specific instructions on to whom and where to pay their rent.
No. The landlord will probably have insured the building but the contents will be the tenants responsibility.
Your question is not clear, is the landlord baggering you for the rent or is it in regards to something else? Is the rent late? Your rent is due every month (or week), regardless of landlord behavior. But the landlord cannot harass tenants, regardless of reason. They can evict for non-payment, following the procedures dictated by the laws in your state. That said, if the landlord is abusive they can be taken to a standard civil court.