The laws that govern rental tenancies are different depending on where you live.
Generally, however, a landlord has a right to legally evict a tenant who damages the property or doesn't clean or maintain it properly. You may also evict a tenant who overstays their lease.
Before evicting the person, there may be different legal requirements - for example, you may have to fill in a form to notify the tenant of a problem, you may have to give the tenant a set period of time in which to fix the problem, etc. etc. Look up "tenancy law" in your local area to find out more detail.
You can evict a drug user in the same time period you could evict any other person. This depends on your local laws and regulations. Consult the property manager or a lawyer.
This depends on whether the tenant is being evicted for nonpayment of rent. If this is the case you can file quickly but first you must issue a notice to pay or quit. If the landlord is evicting for other reasons they have to follow the procedures of their court for evictions.
No he can not do it.
No he can not do it.
Yes, to whoever has control over the property. Until the foreclosing agency or entity has taken possession of the property and giving you proper notice and instructions, the original landlord may continue to collect the rent and to evict a tenant for nonpayment or other violation of the terms of the lease.
Other words could be a piece or a fraction of something.
The question is unclear. If the tenant was successfully evicted, there would be no second opportunity. Perhaps you mean the landlord started eviction, abandoned it and then started again in six months. That is fine, he can do that. There could be exceptions, of course. Imagine the landlord tried to evict because the person voted for the wrong guy. The court said you can't do that. Then the landlord can't evict for some other made-up reason because the first try didn't work. It must also be remembered that state and local laws may differ. And, different laws apply in other countries.
A person could be deceptive at any time when they have something to gain by telling someone something other than the truth. A person is deceptive when they are lying.
you cant unless you evict a family from a house a send them to a new one
Yes, in Montana, a person can be sentenced to jail for nonpayment of child support. However, the court typically considers various factors before imposing jail time and usually provides alternatives such as wage garnishment or payment plans. Generally, jail is considered a last resort for enforcing child support obligations.
In most cases, the 3 other heirs cannot evict you unless they have legal grounds to do so, such as non-payment of agreed-upon expenses or a breach of the terms of the inheritance. It is advisable to seek legal advice and review the terms of the inherited property to understand your rights and responsibilities as a co-owner.
They can only repossess the vehicle which was on the loan agreement. Taking any other vehicle is theft.