Inamuch as foreclosure is a civil action (not a criminal one) it usually falls to the Sheriff's Department of the individual counties to enforce an eviction order. In those few juirisdictions which are under federal control, the job is handled by the US Marshall's Service.
Typically, they are not responsible for back rent. The mortgage contract the tenant has with with the lender is between the tenant and them. The rental contract you have with the tenant is between the tenant and you, and the lender does not enter into this picture. These are two separate transactions.Insofar as any unpaid back lot rent owed by the former tenants before the foreclosure - the lender is not responsible for these and you would have to file a personal lien against the former tenants. However, you MAY have some leverage to hold the mobile home for the payment of "storage fees" incurred since the date the lender foreclosed before you allow the home to leave the park.
If this noise is a problem for other tenants, the landlord may be in violation of the lease with the other tenants. This would give them a reason to leave before their lease is up.
In the U.S., a federal act - the Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act - requires banks on federally related mortgages to give a 90 day notice to quit. You can assume that the mortgage is federally related.
If you want your tenants to vacate your property, assuming there are no "just cause" eviction laws in your community, you must give them written notice to leave. Such a notice must give them 20 days to vacate in most states, or, for non-payment of rent when due, 3 days (check your state's laws). If the tenants still refuse to leave, and the time period of the notice expires, you must start an eviction lawsuit against your tenants. See the Related Questions below.
Yes. A landlord can charge different rents for different apartments, since no two apartments are exactly the same. Also, if the old tenants think they are paying too much, they can leave at the end of the lease term.
As long as your landlord has control of the property he still has the right to collect rent: whether the house is foreclosed is between your Landlord and his mortgage lender. If the property is taken over by the mortgage lender they may ask you to leave. There may be some form of protection available for you, the Tenant, before you are forced to leave. Get legal assistance as soon as you learn about the foreclosure so that you can be prepared for what's next. You may or may not be required to leave soon.
the charge is usually a misdeaminor unless you take a thousand dollar chandelier, but who would leave such a thing in a house anyway?
No. Tenants have permission from the landlord to use the property. You can't claim adverse possession if you had permission to use the property. If a tenant refuses to leave they can be evicted. Squatters are trespassers in the United States.
They're guests, not tenants. You can call the police and have them removed. If they stay long enough they can be considered tenants, so be careful!! If this happens then you must evict them as you would any tenant.
It is the same process as any other foreclosure, except that at the conclusion of the foreclosure, the tenants will be forced to leave.
Does your lease agreement specify that it's the tenants obligation to provide their own mail box? If so, yes. You agreed to it. If that language is missing, a mailbox is cheap and as long as it's not permanently affixed to the house, is yours to keep when you leave.
Scout was responsible for the men leaving the jail.