As courts are the only ones that can 'evict' and courts are only doing essential work so property evictions in many parts of the world have been put on hold because of covid 19, the landlord can still give notice to leave for tenants breach of contract and if the tenants don't obey (then depending on where in the world you are) some courts are accepting eviction applications/some are not but eviction dates/hearings witll not be heard until the local laws allow them to be so....... but any tenant really doesn't need an eviction against them and should do whatever they can to come to an agreement with their landlord and/or leave before it gets to the court eviction point anyway
yes they can be, just not for missing rent. And even then, you still have eto pay the back rent when this is over or you can be evicted.,
yes, if you violate the lease you can be evicted
If the courts are open and your landlord can get a court date = yes.
What kind of violating house rule? If you are talking about let's say your tenant setting your property on fire then you call the fire fighter department and then police. Same w issues that include violence or threatens.
If it doesn't have to do w anything that puts you or your property in serious damage then no, evictions are still illegal.
a tenant cannot evict another tenant (ie. if they are also on the lease) for any reason - only the landlord can
AND the landlord cannot evict just that person - he also has to evict everybody else on the lease as well
If anybody thinks I am wrong then I strongly advise they go see a lawyer (along with other roommates to share the cost?) to find out the legal/financial problems you could get into when sharing , and possible things to could do to minimise them
This could be the BEST money you EVER spend - cos it COULD save you a LOT of money in the future
("Tenants can evict roommates for violating house rules" - no they cant "christin k", not unless they are a sub-tenant (have a lease with another roommate NOT the landlord)
(NO THEY CANT "judy"
EVERYBODY on the landlord's lease is "jointly and severally liable" for EVERYTHING that happens in the apartment
Somebody dont pay rent then the others MUST contribute more to ensure ALL the rent is paid cos if they dont the landlord can sue any of the roommates ( the one with the most money?) for THEM to pay the missing rent
The landlord is ONLY interested in ALL the rent being paid - HE dont care where/who the money comes from so long as its ALL paid
(this does not prevent the roommates suing the person for THEIR share
something gets damaged- same as with rent
Yes. The landlord can have the tenant evicted for lease violations, but not until the local court reopens.
Where I am, all evictions are halted and the courts won't even take the case, so right now tenants can't be evicted, no matter what. Its kinda stupid, but that's what's going on right now.
Of course you can still be evicted as soon as the courts re-open.
These regulations are not the same Worldwide or nationwide & depends on location. Some states in the US have banned all evictions but others only have banned those for not paying rent.
Are you asking if TENANTS can evict or if LANDLORDS can evict? Landlords may evict for violating the lease. Tenants can evict roommates for violating house rules, but if the person they're trying to evict has rent paid up and is on the lease, all a tenant can really do is ASK the tenant to leave. They don't have to unless the landlord says they have to. And right now, that's not happening. A tenant who has remained on the lease and paid his or her rent has some rights AS a tenant. And rules of the shared tenants are arbitrary. If the tenant has violated your safety or well-being, it's possible to remove them--MAYBE. It depends on the rule or rules that were violated.