Hi could some one advise me as to what periodic means in terms of renting a house?
Answers: That isn't a lot of information about what you are looking for.but I've seen on leases where it says that a landlord can come and inspect the property periodically. Usually they have to give you notice, and not just come in whenever they want. Periodic could mean every month, or once a year. They put it in there so that they can legally enter the property to inspect it while you are a tenant.
Periodic = from time to time
Periodic usually means "several times over a specified period but without a regular interval" which means if your landlord says he wants to do periodic inspections he may want to do them 3 or 4 times over a year but not necesssarily every 3 or 4 months so he may do 3 inspections in the first 6 months an 1 in the next 6 months
My LL is trying to make me pay 50/wk for guests staying over 3 days..Does my BF count? I live in PA?
Answers: Read your lease. Whatever you agreed to is in there. If it says you have to be the only tenant, then that's what you agreed to. If it doesn't say how many people can be in the unit, then you can tell your landlord to take a hike. The time to complain about what you disagree with in your lease is before you sign it, not after.
Does your lease specifically talk about a dollar amount per person or a dollar amount per week if the number of people exceeds a certain number?
If it does, then that is what both of you must go by. If it does not, then you need to ask him where he is coming up with the $50.00 figure.
Living in PA doesn't matter one way or the other, and your bf isn't counted any different than a normal visitor unless his name is on the lease along with yours.
If you don't have a lease, then you are in a situation where you kind've make up the rules as you go along. If you piss him off, he can raise the rent or change the rules every 30 days until you either comply with his wishes or decide life is too short to deal with this and move to another place.
Hope this helps!
Even if it's IN your lease, that is an illegal charge.
That is common scam that landlords try to put in leases, and it DOES NOT hold up in court. I have seen landlords even try to evict for a "guest" staying over too much, but I have never seen a judge award one...the only question a judge asks is: Are you receiving payments on time, and in full every month? Is the property being destroyed?
If the answers are yes, then they tell them they have no case.
Never assume that just because something is in the lease, and you sign it, that it is legal and you are bound to it. That is a common misconception by people that don't understand real estate law.
What you are renting is a SPACE. If he wants to run a hotel, then your landlord needs to rezone your property as a hotel.
I would highly suggest you pay a real estate attorney $50 to send him a letter to remind him that such ridiculous charges are illegal.
Wow, that is a pretty bold move for a LL to do to a 6 year tenant. I suspect he has a moral issue with you having overnight guests, and this is his way of dealing with it.
Since you don't have a lease, you are not on solid ground but he cannot arbitrarily start changing the rent. If you went to court over it, the LL would lose.
Have a chat with your landlord, tell him that you think the additional charge is bogus and see if you can work out an amicable solution.
Can i supply a house while it is rented out?
and the renters have a lease till subsequent august?if i did would that mean the buyers are stuck near the tenants?
i live surrounded by palm beach county, florida
Answers: Wow, did Jaundice catch out of the wrong side of the bed?
You certainly can trade your property while it is rented, but your listing will call for to state that it has a tenant and near are tenant rights involved. This is not uncommon, the buyer will inherit the tenant and either agree to them finish the lease or begin the eviction concentration process once the new owner take title.
People don't want to buy a house that renters are in. Get them out of at hand. If you f(a)ck with your renters you bring what you deserve. Be nice and learn the imperative. You have official obligations. As a hotelier this is shocking that you do not know this.
Florida law states you enjoy to give them spy to move:
week to week seven days notice
month to month .......fifteen days see
quarter to quarter thirty days notice
year to year sixty days spy
(Fla. Stat. § 83.57).
Either party must provide see at least this far surrounded by advance of the subsequent rent
payment date contained by order to stop midstream the lease. This means that next to a month
to month lease, if either entertainment wants to downfall the lease October 1st, they must
notify the other party on or beforehand September 15th. If one party give notice
on September 17th, that participant cannot end the lease, lacking the other party’s
agreement, before November 1st.
You own a legally binding agreement beside your tenants. It would miserable that any buyer would have to allow the tenant to live there until August. It's also possible that your tenant could prevent the sale of your house (depending on how the lease is written). Really your best bet is to any ride it out to August or to have your tenant sign an addendum to your lease that would allow you to trade the house and change the move out date to a one or two month catch sight of (you might need to volunteer an incentive for them to sign something like that and that also resources that they could move out with newly a one or two month notice)