Fine out where the potential tenant had been living for the past five years, then look online or call the clerk's office or prothonotary of the county in which the tenant lived.
This should have been disclosed when the landlord performed the background check, before the lease was signed. Well, if the landlord had an application for an apartment to which the tenant denied having been evicted if there were questions that asked such, then the landlord can terminate the lease for the tenant having falsified the information given.
If you're referring to the National Tenant Network, that's an organization that collects data on evictions, and provides search results for landlords. They send staff around to courthouses, and enter into their database names of tenants who have been evicted, and the amount of the judgment. A landlord can subscribe to their service, and quickly learn if a tenant has been evicted, and how many times. It can be important for landlords to use this information with caution. Just having a name and a judgment amount doesn't really tell you much about a case. People get evicted for lots of reasons, sometimes for no reason. Also, these data collecting agencies don't always update their records. So, a tenant might have a $2,000 judgment enter against her in May, and pay it all off in July. But, the reporting agency might never update that record. Agencies like NTN are best used for determining if a person has been evicted several times, and is therefore to be avoided.
Until the unit can be made habitable again or a resonible time that the unit should have been able to be repaired. The tenant would be liable for cost of repair, rent and utilities during that repair.
When the tenant moves out. How soon that will happen will depend on several variables. If the tenant has been evicted and served with a writ of ejectment, then he must leave the premises before the time listed on the ejectment order. If the tenant is voluntarily moving out, they generally will move out by the end of the rent term (the end of the month in most cases).
Most people know if they have been evicted. It is a court procedure and they receive a summons. If this is not the case, it Is possible to check with the court in which you believe the eviction occurred. It is also possible to check your credit report,
Let's say you can try. There is nothing wrong with that. Whether or not you will be able to rent is totally up to the new landlord. The new tenant questionnaire may ask something like "have you ever been evicted ... ". If you have and answer it 'no', you face perjury charges later on. Be honest right up front with the new landlord ... maybe with a good explanation, they might rent to you.
Walter and Anna were evicted from their home due to nonpayment of rent or violation of their lease agreement. This could have been a result of financial difficulties, failure to adhere to the terms of their lease, or other factors leading to their inability to maintain their tenancy. Eviction is a legal process initiated by the landlord to regain possession of the property when the tenant breaches the terms of the lease.
Basically, yes.If you have been served an eviction notice, you should contact a lawyer immediately.It's at least reasonably common for locations to have laws that specify under what circumstances a tenant can, and cannot, be evicted. A local lawyer specializing in tenant rights will be familiar with these, and may be able to prevent or at least delay the eviction process. What you should not do is rely on "somebody on the internet said I couldn't be evicted in the winter," because that's liable to find you shivering on the street in a week or so.
The governing documents spell out the violations for which tenants can be evicted. These sets of violations are unique to each condominium association. Usually, the association will only step in to evict if the tenant consistently violates the CC&Rs, By-Laws, house rules or other governing documents, and the owner has been ineffective in 'controlling' the tenant.
Generally, you could stay until you get evicted, unless you already have been. Once you have been evicted from a house that you do not own, you are legally trespassing after that time and could be arrested.
Generally, tenants are required to live in condominiums in the same way that owners are required to live there. Several steps must be in place, however, according to best practices, in order for an association to evict a tenant. First, there must be evidence that the tenant has been given all the pertinent documents that outline how an owner lives in the property. Then, that the owner sent a copy of the lease with the tenant to the board, and prior to occupancy, cleared the prospective tenant's financial and background reports to the owner's satisfaction. The association must have been involved in addressing any 'rules' violation against the tenant through the owner, that have not been satisfied by the tenant or the owner. Finally, the association's records must show that the board has the power to evict a tenant, given an owner's inability to do so.
Prospective tenants the opportunity to apply for properties both online via the property listing or by printed application. It was remember also applications would not be processed until the property has been viewed and all prospective tenant applications have been received In case of online it must be ensure all applicable fields are completed, failure to do so will impact on the processing of applicant's application.