Quartering
It means to compromise and negotiate. Imagine traveling halfway to someone's house to meet them instead of making them come all the way to your house.
I asked somebody to paint my house and he did and it means that My house was painted by someone I had / got something done (by someone)
Terms describing 'one who lives in a house' include:occupantresidentandflatmate(s)householder (someone responsible for the house's maintenance)housemate(s)inhabitantinmateowner-occupiertenant (someone who pays rent to live in a house)
spray painting on public property, destruction of anyone house, lawn etc.
figuring out which cultures approve of people sharing bedrooms and which cultures emphazie sleeping alone apex answer
Yes, someone can legally sue you for ownership of your house through a process called a property dispute or a claim of adverse possession. This typically involves proving in court that they have a valid legal claim to the property.
The lender will begin the process to take possession of the property by foreclosure.
Look at your agreement with the property manager and see what your agreement is. Probably they are not responsible for making the key available, keeping the house clean and so on. It is difficult to control what the house is like when someone else is living there.
No, a bank cannot foreclose on a house that is in someone else's name unless they have a legal claim to that property, such as a lien or a mortgage agreement with the homeowner. Foreclosure is a legal process that allows a lender to take possession of a property when the borrower defaults on their loan. Only the property owner or those with a legal interest in the property can be subject to foreclosure proceedings.
There is no actually process of house retirement. The only way to make sure to retire a house is to sell the property that it is on, then demolish the house.
The personal property inside the house belongs to the resident.
they lose the house
You do not have to occupy the property. You can lease it to someone else if you wish.
Typically property that cannot be claimed by kin when someone dies goes to the government. If money is owed on the house it is given to the bank.
Virtually any structure built on a property requires a permit.
In general, consent to search a house can be given by the homeowner or someone who has authority over the property.
If you construct a house on someone else's property they can demand that you move it or they can deny you access to it. You haven't provided enough detail about the "inherited" property. Perhaps you could expand.