A tenancy agreement may end when someone goes against one of its material terms Residential Tenancy Act: Section 45.3. If a landlord or tenant breaches a material term and the other party wants to end the tenancy, they must send a written warning to the party who breached the term.
Any roommate who is named as a tenant in the tenancy agreement is presumptively a tenant with rights and obligations under the Act; whether any roommate is a tenant or not is ultimately a legal determination that can only be made by a Residential Tenancy Branch arbitrator who will weigh the factors in favour and ...
An “occupant/roommate” is a person who rents from a tenant with whom they live, rather than the landlord, and is therefore not covered under the Residential Tenancy Act. This type of living situation is common in shared houses where a “head-tenant” rents out bedrooms to roommates.
There is no express time frame but typically if they are permanently on premises beyond a week or two they can claim rights. As far as them leaving, yes, if they refuse to leave on their own, you would need to obtain a court ordered eviction.
As a tenant, you are legally responsible for the lease agreement that you signed with the landlord and property owner. While you can choose to live with someone who is not on the lease, some potential complications and risks come with this choice. The landlord could choose to have the non-tenant evicted.
If your name nor signature is nowhere on the lease or you live with the owner of the property, yes they can ask you to leave. No 'eviction' is needed if you never had a contract. If you don't go they can have you warned off the property and can file a violation for trespassing if you come back.
You give him a written notice to move, allowing him one month as required by Texas law and specifying the date on which his tenancy will end. If he refuses to leave after that month, your recourse would be to file for an eviction in court.
Create a list of house rules with your roommates and agree on how you'll handle monthly rent payments. Decide how you'll be sharing food, utility, and furniture costs, and try to balance out how much each roommate spends. Use digital payment apps for splitting expenses or set up a shared bank account.
A written roommate agreement is a contract created and signed by you and your roommates (no need to get the landlord involved) before or when you move in together. It should establish house rules like quiet hours, division of household duties, a cleaning schedule, how you'll handle overnight guests, and more.