If the non-tenant is living with a tenant in your property you need to tell the tenant to get rid of him or you can get rid of the tenant. If the latter occurs the non-tenant will be forced to leave automatically. If the non-tenant is not living there you can demand that he leaves and issue a trespass warning against him. It doesn't matter how that person is related to your tenant: you have the right to control who comes in and out if that person is a nusiance. Remember, non-tenants do not have the same rights as tenants, even if that person has a written lease between him and the Tenant (called subletting). As a landlord you have the right to ban your tenant from renting to others (subletting or subleasing). If you allow this to happen you may have more difficulties in kicking out the non-tenant.
Yes, the landlord can evict a non-tenant from the property just as they could the tenant. You must follow the same eviction procedures as you would with a tenant.On a side note, a court may agree that the non-tenant was in fact a tenant-after the fact because of the duration in which they lived on the property. Such situations are similar to families with children. You have the adults on the lease, but the children are residing there without being on the lease.
I will have to evict my room mate soon unless she can pay her share of the expenses.
As long as the landlord still has control over the property he has the right to collect rent on it and evict non-paying tenants.
Whether a tenant is disabled does not have a bearing on whether he can be evicted. If a PHA has the right to evict a tenant then it can evict such person regardless of disability.
No, a guarantor cannot legally evict a tenant. Only the landlord or property owner has the legal authority to evict a tenant through the proper legal channels.
If the person has the legal right to live there on a month-to-month basis, he is a tenant. But we are presuming that you, the landlord, didn't rent the unit out to this person: perhaps your tenant did, known as subleasing. If you, the landlord, allowed this, then you have to have your tenant evict the sub-tenant. If you didn't allow this, then you have to enforce the terms of the lease, and make your tenant correct this problem immediately or you can evict him, which automatically forces the sub-tenant out.
I'm no lawyer but... A non-tenant is likely considered a guest of the tenant. If they are not welcome, they are a trespasser. The landlord should let the tenant have peaceful enjoyment of the premises. The tenant should be able to call the police and have the non-tenant removed.
no
I am presuming we have three components here: a landlord, a tenant, and a subtenant. The landlord in this case is presumably renting to a tenant, while the tenant is presumably renting to a subtenant. I presume that tenant has a lease while the subtenant doesn't. The tenant becomes the landlord for the subtenant. Since there is no lease (in most states subletting does not involve a lease) in this case, the tenant who is the subtenant landlord can evict the subtenant. While the main landlord can evict the tenant -which automatically evicts the subtenant -only the tenant can evict the subtenant. But the main landlord can evict all by evicting the tenant.
Bankruptcy does not relieve a tenant from paying his rent: it's not a debt. Rent is due in advance of the rental period and is not an extension of credit. Oh, and a landlord cannot evict a tenant simply because he filed for bankruptcy.
A landlord must file an eviction through the Civil Court in order to evict a tenant.
You can evict a tenant when the tenant breaks the lease or rental contract by not paying rent or lease payments. You can also evict a tenant who breaks a lease by breaking rules listed on the lease.