Tenants do not own land they just lease it from landlords. The length of the lease can be determined by the two parties.
Tenant
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.
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.
It depends upon whether the refrigerator was part of the rental contract. If the renter brought their own refrigerator, then it is up to the tenant to replace or repair. If the rental already have a refrigerator in place, then it is the landlords job to replace or repair.
If the lease agreement states that the tenant should switch the account to their name and pay the gas bill then the tenant should pay the landlord back. If there was no written agreement, or understanding, that the tenant pay the gas bill then you could try filing a complaint with the town, housing court, landlord-tenant agency, etc., if the landlord simply stopped providing heat and hot water. If the understanding was that the tenant pay their gas, they never switched the account to their name and the landlord didn't notice for seven months, then the tenant should start paying the gas bill and hope the landlord doesn't sue them for all the prior gas charges.
He is a tenant farmer.
It was not their own land
Anything that's farmed in the area. The "tenant" part of "tenant farmer" refers to the fact that they do not own the land, but are merely renting it from the landowner.
In the United StatesA tenant farmer is one who resides on and farms land owned by a landlord.
The person you are referring to is called a tenant farmer.
I think you are referring to Tenant Farmers.
Tenant
Cassie's family did not own any land; they were tenant farmers who worked on the Granger plantation owned by Mr. Granger.
I think you mean 'Tenant Farmer'. A tenant farmer is a farmer who does not own the land that he/she cultivates. Their rent is usually a fixed percentage of the harvest each year.
After the slaves were freed white plantation owners had to find new ways to work their land. They typically used three methods: sharecropping tenant farming and wage labor. Sharecropping was a common practice in the South. It involved a system where a tenant farmer usually a former slave would work the land in exchange for a share of the crops proceeds at the end of the harvest. The plantation owner would provide the land tools and supplies while the tenant farmer handled the labor. Tenant farming was similar to sharecropping but the tenant farmer was required to pay rent for the use of the land. This allowed plantation owners to maintain control of their land but it often left the tenant farmer in a difficult financial position. The third option was wage labor which involved hiring workers to work the land. This was the most expensive option but it allowed plantation owners to maintain more control over the land and the labor. In the end white plantation owners had to adjust their methods of working the land after the slaves were freed. Sharecropping tenant farming and wage labor were the three primary options available to them and each had its own pros and cons.
Sharecropping is a system of agriculture or agricultural production in which a landowner allows a tenant to use the land in return for a share of the crop produced on the land. A tenant farmer is one who resides on and farms land owned by a landlord.
Landlord's insurance would be necessary to protect the owners's property in the event of mishap but it would remain the responsibility of the tenant to cover their own belongings with tenant insurance.