"Tenant holding over" refers to a situation where a tenant remains in possession of a rental property after their lease has expired, without the landlord's consent. This can occur either through the tenant's refusal to vacate or by continuing to occupy the property without a new lease agreement. In such cases, the landlord may choose to evict the tenant or accept the tenant as a month-to-month renter, depending on local laws and the circumstances of the tenancy. Legal implications can vary based on jurisdiction and specific lease terms.
I am not familiar with the legal term "tnho." It is possible that it is a typo or abbreviation. If you can provide more context or details, I may be able to help further.
Once you, the landlord, have accepted a tenant by handing him the keys, then the tenant has legal possession of the property. If the lease was mutually signed and the keys were handed to the tenant, then you must wait until the lease expires and give at least 30 days notice that you will not renew the lease before asking the tenant to leave. Landlord and tenant laws are designed to protect both the landlord and the tenant. If the tenant does not violate the terms of the lease once it has been mutually signed and the property turned over to the tenant, then he has the legal right - as long as he pays his rent on time - to remain on the property. If he violates the terms of the lease at any time, you can seek legal remedy to correct the violations or to remove the tenant.
Holding something over your head gives the mental image of holding it just out of reach so that you will pursue it.
Subletting an apartment means that a new tenant will take over the remainder of another individual's lease
A tenant attorney specializes in representing tenants in legal matters related to their landlord-tenant relationships. They can help tenants resolve issues such as evictions, lease disputes, security deposit disputes, and habitability concerns. Tenant attorneys can provide legal advice, negotiate on behalf of the tenant, and represent them in court if necessary.
Generally yes. A current tenant who wants to stay is normally going to have priority over a potential new tenant. But it is still the landlord's call: perhaps he doesn't want that tenant any more.
My organization is currently the Holding Company of four buildings, our tenant is claiming ownership of the buildings because they claim they have been paying the so call mortgage though lease payments. Each lease agreement was signed by both parties, and the tenant agreed to pay the lease amounts and make improvements as needed. The tenant now says that the prior leadership of my organization made statements that my organization was merely a "Holding Company" and that the building would transferred to the tenant. I the prior leadership of my organization did not leave any written document stating the buildings would at one time or another the building would be simply turned over to the tenant. I just their word, against ours, yes, they have file a law suit against my organization. My organization has all the property Titles, and warranty Deeds to support ownership. Can the tenant claim the buildings based on a hear say from a prior director? Thank you..
You need to come into agreement with the current tenant as well as the landlord. If the landlord approves, you will sign an agreement to take over the lease from the current tenant.
It's Indalo, the Rainbow Man :)
For the purposes of answering this question, I presume that the tenant is a rental tenant and that the Landlord is under foreclosure. Tenant must continue to pay the rent to the landlord as long as they have control over the property. The Foreclosing company, once it takes over, must give the tenant specific instructions on to whom and where to pay their rent.
Yes, it is legal to date. It is not legal to do anything more than holding hands. Age of consent is 16 and he is over 18, so it could be sexual assault or statutory rape.
Oxycotton is legal, to an extent. What I mean about that is in 2001 the 100mg Oxycontin tablet was made illegal. People are overdosing on it all over the U.S.