The sale of a house does not terminate a rental agreement, but the rental agreement is with the former owner and not with the new owner, unless otherwise agreed in the sale. The former owner of the house is liable to the tenants for damages, unless otherwise stipulated in the rental agreement. You will have to evict the tenants to get them out, and they can sue the former owner. I don't think anyone would sell a house without some sort of transfer or termination of the lease. I am not a lawyer.
A resident does not usually owe rent to a non resident in a house owned by "tenants in common" if the resident is one of the tenants. When a house is owned by "tenants in common", all tenants share use of the house or property. If one chooses not to use it, that is his business. (Of course, what is usual may not apply in your local area. There are also ways to end a joint tenancy.)
Yes. at the age of 18 the son/daughter is held liable for themself
Not if the title has been worded and filed in the county land recorder's office where the property is located. The wording would be "John_____ and Mary____ as Joint Tenants With Rights Of Survivorship".
The President of the United States is the tenant of the White House.
Officially he had none. It is rumored, though, that he was the father of his house-keeper's daughter.
A room or set of rooms forming a separate residence within a house or block of apartments.
The traditional way is to ask them. Be aware though thattenant property is covered by a tenants policy, Not by the property owners policy.
Liable for what? A parking ticket? Not if it isn't your car.
Since the parents are divorced, the house is owned as Joint Tenants (not Tenants in the Entirity), so as Joint Tenants, the surviving parent would own half the house with the two children owning the other half. If the house is owned as Tenants in Common, which isn't as likely, then when one person dies, the other person gets the entire house.
look up joint tenants and tenants in common.Depends on how it was deeded
Yes