After the issuance of a writ of possession, which is not the same as an eviction, you have 30 days if lot rent is paid, 5 days if it is not.
You would get the best answer to that from your local Government Tenancy dept.
Legally - until the end of the notice period. After that period expires - technically you are committing the act of trespass - and can be arrested !
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.
As soon as the documents are signed transferring ownership, you are immediately evicted. In most cases however, previous owners will be evicted before the auction.
I can't find an Orlando in Texas. The one in Florida is 500 miles or 7 hours from Mobile.
Would depend on the formalities of the jurisdiction, including get the sherrif to evict.
About 59 minutes
I have seen mobile homes 32 feet long.
18x80
What is the law to evict someone from rental home
About a month.
You gots to go negro