Yes, a tenant can receive mail addressed to people who do not live at their rental address if the mail is mistakenly delivered or if the sender has used the tenant's address for some reason. However, tenants are not obligated to forward or handle mail that does not belong to them, and they can return it to the postal service or inform the sender. It's important for tenants to ensure that their own mail is not mistakenly delivered to others.
no
Residence could be the people that live with you, and the address is, well your address of where you live.
If you receive mail for someone who does not live at your address, you should contact the postal service or the sender of the mail to inform them of the situation.
Possibly. If someone pays money in exchange for a place to live, that person is a tenant.
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.
If they say they live there, they have become a tenant. It doesn't matter if it is one day.
This means that wherever you live, or wherever your current ip address is located in, cannot receive the offer you are trying to receive.
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Not in the US, at least. With the shrinking number of farmers and more efficient farming methods, many farmers (if not most) farm at least some land that they do not live on but they are the tenant.
She certainly might if she now holds title.
it depends if the disabled tenant has another place to live. if they do then yes if not no
Some live in group homes, some live with their families, and others live in apartments where they receive living support.