Yes, if the life tenant was the individual who executed the lease.
They can TERMINATE a lease, if the lessee is in violation of the lease.
No. A lease is a leasehold estate.
If you are involved in a legally drawn and binding land lease contract, you cannot terminate it except by mutual consent of both you and the person to whom you granted the lease.
In most cases, a guarantor cannot terminate a lease agreement on behalf of the tenant. The guarantor's responsibility is to ensure that the tenant fulfills their obligations under the lease, such as paying rent. If the tenant wants to terminate the lease, they typically need to follow the terms outlined in the lease agreement, such as giving proper notice to the landlord.
Yes.
It depends on the terms of the lease. The lease may terminate or the lease may "run with the land."
The right to cure is a written clause in a contract or lease that permits one party to rectify a default that most likely will terminate the agreement or cause financial loss or loss of other rights. The right to cure is usually on a time limit offering a window of opportunity to the holder of the right to fix the default.
You need to check the language in your lease to determine what your rights are in terminating the lease.
Ah, yeah! Your lease does not allow you to do illegal activities.
Basically every lease has one lease holder. Anyone else on the lease is usually someone who was being allowed to live in the apartment. The main lease holder is the one who was responsible for the rent. So if anyone else moves out, the full amount of the rent is expected from lease holder.
what is the difference between a life lease and a life estate
This would depend upon the terms of the lease, but generally depend on why the landlord wants to terminate the lease. If the tenant violated the terms of the lease then the landlord can terminate the lease after proper warning or after proper notice is given. Otherwise the landlord has to wait until the lease expires and can choose not to renew.