Sure. It depends on the nature and cause of the eviction, and how forgiving your new landlord-to-be is about such things.
Yes.
That's his choice, but know that the eviction can still show in court records.
Depends on the reason for the eviction, and whether you gave a last month's rent deposit.
Collecting the rent and proceeding with evictions are two different processes. Either the tenant pays the rent or faces eviction.
No, a stay of eviction is simply a delay in the eviction process, which may be the result of a dispute, such as of how much rent to pay.
This depends upon the reason for the eviction, as the process is normally faster when it's an eviction for nonpayment of rent. An eviction process for this type of eviction is about three weeks from the date the eviction is filed, keeping in mind that before the eviction can get filed the landlord must post a three day notice on the door or deliver it otherwise to the tenant. If the eviction is for other reasons than the process can be longer but the tenant will still have to pay rent, more likely to the clerk's office instead of the landlord (the landlord will eventually get that money -14% in fees for the clerk).
Not paying rent is grounds for eviction. Most courts won't care about the bankruptcy, and most bankruptcy judges will not stop an eviction.
Yes, you still pay rent, because being bankrupt does not entitle you to free housing.
This is somewhat you mean by owing rent. If you were evicted for nonpayment of rent than the landlord could sue you for the money you owe in back rent. Since there was no lease involved, your landlord cannot sue for future rent.
No, only a five yer eviction is allowed
A stipulation in an eviction is a agreement where the landlord and tenant agree to something, such as a move-out date, payment of rent for dismissal of the eviction, etc.