Yes, you may petition to have the tenant evicted for excessive damage to your property. While they rent it, they're expected to have due regard for the property. If they're willfully and maliciously destroying the property you have the right to mitigate the damage.
Give proper notice with regard to your municipalities eviction laws. Take photo's of the property damage and if you proceed to court, bring the invoices for fixing, repairing, cleaning, and restoring the property to its original (not new, but original) condition.
not till the tenant violates the lease or the lease expires
Probably not. The other tenant's situation has nothing to do with you.
Every state has its own laws regarding what to do with personal property of an evicted tenant. You'll need to check with your state's rules.
No. Before any tenant is evicted from a property, the landlord must follow judicial proceedings.
Then he is called a holdover tenant, who can be charged up to twice the amount of normal rent until he leaves, and can be evicted for non-payment if he doesn't pay it.
Homes are foreclosed on by the lender. The title to the property is obtained by the lender in the foreclosure process and then the tenant is evicted by legal action.
Not on that basis. But if the tenant violates the terms of the lease, they can be evicted regardless of that condition.
This depends on the mediation agreement, which often has a clause that states that a tenant can be evicted automatically if he doesn't follow the rules on the agreement.
No. Final judgments are final, regardless of what has happened since the final hearing.
This depends on the laws of the state where the property is located. In Massachusetts, for instance, the tenant could be evicted with a 48-hour notice, if the landlord has a police report stating that the police found an illegal firearm in the unit.
Absolutely. Many states have statutes that say exactly that the tenant must grant access.
She certainly might if she now holds title.