Under the landlord/tenant act in Florida and in most states, the landlord may not kick you out with only 24 hour notice. Depending on why the landlord is kicking you out, advanced notice must be issued, and the landlord cannot force you to move unless a judge signed an order of such. The exception to this rule is if the dwelling is uninhabitable.
Only if you agree to it or the Landlord and gives 24 hours notice
Not sure why this would be a landlord/tenant issue, since the landlord can sell to anyone he or she wants and the tenant simply continues paying rent, but to a different landlord. The only "notice" required would be when the new landlord wants the rent sent to a different place or wants to change the terms of the tenancy (usually with 30 days prior notice, unless otherwise specified in a lease).
Not in any state that I know of. Most state codes require that the landlord provide a mailbox, and locking it would be a breach of quiet enjoyment.
if you have a lease you will leave when the lease is finished, if you are on a month to month agreement , the landlord must give you a written notice for you to move within 2 months, if the landlord wants you evicted, they can only do that through a court order with a bailiff present, if you have not paid your rent or are in arrears the landlord has every right to remove you from the premises, this being said, they will still need an eviction notice, also your credit will be toast.,
Nothing. The landlord need only give you the notice required by law (20 days in WA) and then simply move back in. The exception is if you have a lease--in that case, the landlord must honor the term of the lease unless the landlord and tenant mutually agree to break the lease. In that case, the tenant is free to demand compensation of the landlord for the landlord's breaking the lease.
A landlord can only go onto property unannounced to handle an emergency. In Pennsylvania, a landlord needs to give the tenant 24 hours notice to enter a property
The Sommer Law Group in Pittsburgh PA specializes in landlord tenant disputes. The Sommer Law Group is the most well known law firm in dealing with questions about the rights of landlords and tenants. The Sommer Law Group offers seminars to educate PIttsburgh landlords and tenants of their rights and protections. The Sommer Law Group's website is www.sommerlawgroup.org
only if the lease has a statement that your lease is automatically renewed unless the tenant does not wish same.
Before your apartment can be shown to a potential tenant it must be vacant. A landlord only the right to be in your apartment for routine or emergency maintenance, the former with proper notice of at least one day. Until you are legally evicted from their apartment, it remains your home.
Only if the landlord files a court case, or reports the arrearage to the credit bureaus.
Generally speaking, yes. But only if proper notice is given at the proper time, and then only if the repair is essential for habitation of the unit. In Florida, for example, you must give the landlord a notice of at least seven days before the next rent is due, before you can deduct the repairs from the rent. If you do this, however, the landlord may still begin eviction proceedings against you, something that he will lose in court if the repair is justified. And if the landlord does lose in a case like this, he can be liable to you, the tenant, for damages of up to three times the amount of the rent.
He could, but it depends on the wording of the lease. Normally there is only one tenant on a lease: the rest of the legal occupants are considered part of the household. A landlord can kick out the one tenant and create a new lease for another occupant, making him the tenant.