You must have the lease re-written and probably need the other tenants on the lease present as well. You can't simply walk away from it as you will still be legally bound for your portion of the monthly rent and utility expenses.
No.
If the terms of the lease include that the tenant must have electric and the tenant is in violation of the lease terms you can evict him.
A lease that is terminated by the death of the tenant.
not till the tenant violates the lease or the lease expires
No lease does not mean no rules. If a tenant causes excessive damages you can still sue them.
“At the end of a term lease can the lanlord require the tenant to move out?”
Yes, a guarantor can sue the tenant for defaulting on the lease agreement.
no
read your lease agreement
In many states, yes; in many, no. But if a landlord doesn't give a tenant a copy of his lease then he cannot expect the tenant to follow all the terms of it. If the tenant does fail to follow the terms and the landlord takes him to court, the tenant can argue that he wasn't provided a copy of the lease.
Of course!! In general it will always be the potential tenant who will sign the lease first.
He could, but it depends on the wording of the lease. Normally there is only one tenant on a lease: the rest of the legal occupants are considered part of the household. A landlord can kick out the one tenant and create a new lease for another occupant, making him the tenant.