If they co-signed a lease they should check the property regularly and also make certain the rent is being paid on time. A co-signer on a lease is responsible for paying the rent if the primary lessee doesn't and is also responsible for paying any damages that go beyond the security deposit.
Under most state laws a landlord must give you adequate notice before he can enter your property for routine maintenance or inspection. Absent this notice, he may enter your property if it's an emergency. However, in many states, your request for maintenance or repairs is sufficient to allow your landlord to enter your property without consent.
No, it is illegal for someone to enter your property without permission.
No. In that case the lessee has not been granted a lease by ALL the owners of the property. Their interest has not been perfected and so they would have no right to enter or use the property.
No, it is not possible for an underaged person to enter into a financial contract with or without a cosigner.
The government may not enter, seize, or otherwise use an individual's personal property without probable cause or the owner's consent.
not without the renters consent or unless the landdlord has cause to believe there are damages or illegal activities and then they must have police present
The government may not enter, seize, or otherwise use an individual's personal property without probable cause or the owner's consent.
YES, BUT ONLY WITH YOUR CONSENT
No. Assuming the tenant permitted the plumber to enter the property, it would not be trespass. The plumber could not collect fees from the homeowner if the tenant authorized the work.
Police officers can enter private property under certain circumstances, such as with a search warrant, if they have probable cause to believe a crime is being committed, or if they have the property owner's consent.
You are better off asking the lender or collection agency where to deliver the vehicle. If you abandon the vehicle on private property, no one will be able to enter onto the property without the private property owner's consent. And you risk having someone steal it, since you have to leave the key.
Individuals who can enter your property without permission include law enforcement officers with a warrant, emergency responders in the case of an emergency, and utility workers for necessary maintenance or repairs.