In Washington state, if a home owner dies and leaves his/her mobile home to another and the heir is denied occupancy of the mobile home park, the mobile home will have to be moved. Other options would be to sell the mobile home to persons approved by the park, or to rent to approved persons.
If you own the mobile home, then you have the right to remove it from the mobile home park, unless you are in a lease agreement between you and the mobile home park.
The bank or current lien holder will take possession of the mobile home after the required steps of repossession takes place. The bank or current lien holder of the mobile home is responsible for paying the lot rent unless the mobile home is sold to a secondary party such as an investor. At this point, the lot rent follows the ownership of the mobile home. In most cases, the larger banks who specialize in mobile home financing will pay atleast a portion of the lot rent. It is very important to contact the park owner to verify the amount of park rent that is due. This is very negotiable especially if the new owner of the mobile home plans on leaving the mobile home in the park. Note: The park owner is a great prospect to sell this mobile home to.
as for the state laws part. a mobile home company/property is considered private property and the city police cannot enforce speeding or sit in a mobile home lot to check for speeders, ie. Although it be private property they have to abide by state laws just like any others, such as a felon in a mobile home park cannot own a firearm just as he wouldn't if he didnt live in a park.
The cost to build a mobile home park depends greatly on how many mobile homes will need to be installed within the park. If the park itself is being built without any homes, the plumbing, electrical, and gas hook ups will need to be added to each lot. The cost for that endeavor will depend on the size of the park.
A park model is a mobile home (which means it's anchored in a park,usually on blocks) -An RV is basically a travelling home, not nearly as large as most mobile homes.
The home is still yours, therefore you still have to pay rent as long as it sits there. But you have been evicted, so you cannot live there. Best bet is to see if the park will buy it or find someone to buy it. Get what you can for it. Or if its not worth alot to you, abandon it. This happens more than you would think. BTW, they are called "mobile homes" but they are not as mobile as you might think. They cost about $8K to $12k to move (tear down, move, set-up). If this home is really old it may fall apart.
It's a park where all the mobile owners bought shares in the park when they bought their mobile. -They are their own management.
MHP
There is one Garden City Mobile Home Park In Columbus, IN. -( but there may be some in other places too.)
I would imagine you can. -Consult local insurance brokers.
It's a park where all the mobile owners bought shares in the park when they bought their mobile. -They are their own management.