The legal responsibilities of a cosigner on a lease agreement are the same as the tenant without the benefit of tenancy.
in most cases, paying whatever the tenant owes in back rent and paying for any damage to the dwelling.
If your landlord evicted you he has the right to tell another party, such as a potential renter, that he evicted you. He may not tell another person that he will or is about to evict you.
Yes
No, landlord insurance does not provide protection to the renter. Landlord insurance simply covers the landlord if an issue that is of their fault arises. All other issues are at the renter's responsibility. All renters should acquire renters insurance.
FIle for a lien against them in court.
No, property repairs and improvements are the responsibility of the landlord. The landlord can however raise the person's rent to offset expenses, assuming there is not a valid rental agreement disallowing the action.
A co-signer shares financial responsibility for the rental. Unpaid rent, damage to the apartment after moving and so on will fall on your shoulders if the renter does not do as he/she should.
Yes! Your landlord can require anything he wants in the lease.
No. A landlord can APPLY for a restraining order on a tenant, but the Sheriff, Court Officer, or Process Server will perform the actual service on the renter.
Most Renters Insurance has a Liability component as well as personal property coverage. So if the fire was the renters fault the landlord could sue the renter then the liability insurance would pay.
In general, no. Renter's insurance covers the property of the renter, not the property of the landlord.
The diiference between landlord & renters insurance is that landlord insurance is a policy that covers property owner from financial losses with their property.Renters insurance is policy that cover the renter from financial losses or personal items.
The landlord, of course.