A landlord may have some responsibility for a tenant's disruptive behavior, particularly if it violates lease agreements or local noise ordinances. However, the extent of this responsibility can vary based on state laws and the terms of the lease. Typically, once a landlord is made aware of the disruptive behavior, they are generally expected to take reasonable steps to address the issue. Ultimately, consistent disruptive behavior may lead to eviction proceedings if not resolved.
Landlord.
The landlord
Yes, the landlord is responsible. But keep in mind that this is not a landlord/tenant issue: it's a small claims issue. So this is heard in a small claims court inquired, not a landlord/tenant court.
Are you the Landlord? Then yes, to a certain degree. If you rent to someone you know is selling drugs, for example, you could lose your rental property. You as the Landlord must develop rules by which your tenants must abide in order to control their behavior. If the tenant violates the terms you can evict him. However there is no law that specifically holds the Landlord liable for any tenant behavior problems that may occur: the tenant faces his own consequences for his behavior, including you kicking him out.
If the tenant damaged them, then it's the tenants fault. Ifit was the landlord, then it's their fault
Yes, a landlord can be held responsible for their tenant's actions in certain situations, such as if the landlord knew about illegal activities taking place on their property and did not take action to stop it.
The landlord, because he/she owns the property.
tennant
Yes, a landlord can provide a negative reference for a tenant based on their experience with the tenant's behavior, payment history, or other relevant factors.
Normally not: every bill in the tenant's name is that tenant's responsibility, not of the landlord.
you will have to read your contract agreement that you signed for the tenant/landlord relationship.
Landlord, but probably only once a year. The landlord should have a tech check the filters.