Do you give attention to most landlords will allow a 40 gallon fish container even if they wrote no pets surrounded by the announcement for a 1bdrm?
thank youAnswers: I have be a renter for a while, and I have even so to encounter a landlord that have a problem with a tenant have a medium-size fish tank, even when their want ad stipulates "No pets - no waterbeds."
Occasionally, you may find a landlord who believes aquariums create roaches (lol). But, bottom line is that the simply way to know is if you telephone call and ask.
Nope, because fishtanks leak and and they also will buoy roaches because of the high moisture.
I don't allow ANY fishtanks surrounded by my rental properties for that reason.
Hi,
MOST landlords are concerned nearly damage to property when they stipulate no pets.
Ask the innkeeper, but unless the lease, or agreement restricts you from having a waterbed, I'd be pretty sure they won't baulk.
If they don't allow waterbeds, they have a alarm of potential water spoil, and they may object to the fish container.
Good Luck.
In my experience, they won't mind. But there are exceptions - better ask past signing a lease.
My name is on my home, but my name and my boyfriends name are both on the loan. Can I legally kick him out?
Answers: Even if his name was not on anything at all - and he was just a boyfriend that you let live there with you - you cannot kick him out with going to court and getting a formal eviction.
Maybe.
One factor is whether you are in a community property state and if you have been together long enough by that state's statutes to be considered a legal union. The parameters for what defines this varies widely by jurisdiction, so you will want to check on those things.
Next, you will need to refinance the house to get your boyfriend's name off it.
If what you say is true, he's a schmuck and deserves to be evicted. If you are absolutely positive he is not on the deed, then you can serve him notice and evict him.
He is still responsible for the mortgage payment however, which is what makes him a schmuck and worthy of eviction.
Ps, all these people saying that it depends on what state you are in are also schmucks. The state does not matter, you are not married, if he is not on title he has no ownership rights. There is no community property for the unmarried. IN ANY STATE!
With a 30-day notice, and if he refuses to leave, you can get him legally evicted...HOWEVER.
I would check that title again if I were you...I would find it very difficult to believe that his name is not on the title but he is on the mortgage.
If by chance you owned the house and THEN refinanced it with him, then the vesting was CHANGED when you closed on the refinance.
It is NOT community property if you are NOT married.
He does NOT own half the home, if you double check the title and find his name is not on it...therefore, if you kick him out, you don't owe him anything, but he is still on the hook for the loan.that is why it's hard to believe that he would agree to that.
Do you know of any studio/one bedroom apartments in Hilton Head, SC that allows pets(2 cats)?
Answers: Check craigslist.org
Hi,
If you haven't already, call a local real estate company.
There are frequently rentals available that won't advertise that pets are allowed, people prefer renting to non pet owners but that doesn't mean they won't (money is money). Usually a "pet deposit" is required.
Other than a fee that may be charged to pull a credit report, in the $30 range, the agency should not charge you anything, if they want to charge a fee beyond the credit check, call a different realtor.
Most places charge the owner for handling the property, so if they request anything more than a fee for the credit check, they will be looking to rip you off and shouldn't be trusted.
Good Luck