Certainly. If you are being evicted, you had to have breached the lease from the beginning. But be aware, many of the aspects of the lease you are still held to, like damage repair or other things that are within the lease. It doesnt remove the laws and requirements of your obligations as agreed upon within the lease. It just means you tenancy is comming to an end here shortly.
You can only lose your section 8 voucher if you violate the terms of your lease, the landlord files eviction proceedings against you, and wins a judgment against you for eviction.
The constructive eviction clause of most state laws dictate that a tenant can move out and terminate his tendency if the dwelling is too uninhabitable to continue to live in. This allows the tenant to break the lease without forfeiting his security deposit.
This depends on how serious or repetitious the violation is. A landlord can give you some time to correct the violation or can ask you to leave. If the landlord chooses the latter, he can choose not to renew the lease, terminate it with some notice, such as 30 days or less, or terminate it immediately by means of an eviction (an eviction is actually a court proceeding, not just a request for you to move. If you move per the request without the matter heading to court you will not have an eviction record, which could jeopardize your housing choice voucher if you have one and your ability to get into another home).
They can TERMINATE a lease, if the lessee is in violation of the lease.
You are given the allotted amount of time given on the notice to vacate the premises. If you do not vacate the premises then the landlord can start eviction proceedings against you.
Get a new place before the final judgment hits the Court's public record, and your credit report. There are companies that search court records for eviction judgments, enter the info into a database and then charge fees to Landlords for checking a potential tenant's background. Be aware that even though you sign a new lease, if the new landlord should ever become aware that you had an eviction when you signed your lease, it may be grounds for them to terminate your lease, and you're out again. Read the lease or application for their policy on future knowledge of your previous eviction. And keep your fingers crossed they never find out. It will be on your record for 7-10 years, depending upon the state and eviction laws.
If you are involved in a legally drawn and binding land lease contract, you cannot terminate it except by mutual consent of both you and the person to whom you granted the lease.
Yes.
It depends on the terms of the lease. The lease may terminate or the lease may "run with the land."
You need to check the language in your lease to determine what your rights are in terminating the lease.
Ah, yeah! Your lease does not allow you to do illegal activities.
Yes, if the life tenant was the individual who executed the lease.