Dude, its too late. Seriously.
No if you are evicted you do not live there anymore and there for don't have to pay rent.
That depends on the laws of your state.
When you are evicted yet you have paid rent, you can file a dispute at the rent tribunal.
You can be evicted & may have to pay any back rent if they get a judgement.
Not by itself. That is something that is ordered by a judge when you are evicted. It basically means to return the property back to its original condition if you damaged it (or at least pay the landlord for what you damaged).
A tenant can be evicted for habitually paying their rent late. In Massachusetts, being late twice in twelve months is grounds for eviction.
Unfortunately, if a dying person doesn't have the money to pay their rent, they can be evicted. The dying person should try and appeal to the landlord or make their case known to the press. A person can take a few years to die, not all fatal problems are quick, some can take a long time.
You should be able to, as long as she's the one originally on the lease. They will assume that if she could pay rent alone, then she could do it just as easily with you living there. It also depends on why you were evicted. LATE RENT= Shouldn't be a problem. POLICE ACTION, COMPLAINTS= Not a chance. Good luck.
?? They can file all the legal paperwork and move any personal property you have on the property to the curb. If you have received a notice of eviction, you have been evicted, but they can't physically remove you from the property if you are not there.
This varies by state. In general, the notice will give you a time frame (usually 3 days) in which to pay up, and if you don't pay, you can be evicted immediately after the stated period. For example, if the notice says you have three days to pay up, and you don't pay, the landlord can have you served with an eviction summons on the fourth day.
yes people must pay of there debt or they can be evicted from there home or worse !
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.