Rental Agreements
Real estate rental
A rental agreement is often called a lease, especially when real estate is
rented. In addition to the basics of a rental (who, what, when, how much), a
real estate rental may go into much more detail on these and other issues. The
real estate may be rented for housing, parking a vehicle(s), storage, business,
agricultural, institutional, or government use, or other reasons.
Who: The parties involved in the contract, the lessor (sometimes called the
owner or landlord) and the lessee (sometimes called the renter or tenant) are
identified in the contract. A housing lease may specify whether the renter is
living alone, with family, children, room-mate, visitors. A rental may delineate
the rights and obligations of each of these. For example, a "sub-let" to a
stranger might not be permitted without permission of the landlord. This also
applies to whether or not pets may be kept by the renter. On the other hand, the
renter may also have specific rights against intrusions by the landlord (or
other tenants), except under emergency circumstances. A renter is in possession
of the property, and a landlord would be trespassing upon the renter's rights if
entry is made without proper notice and authority (e.g., 24 hours' notice,
daytime, knock first, except for emergency repairs, in case of fire, flood,
etc).
What: Rented real estate may include all or part of almost any real property,
such as an apartment, house, building, business office(s) or suite, land, farm,
or merely an inside or outside space to park a vehicle, or store things. The
premises rented may include not only specific rooms, but also access to other
common areas such as off-street parking, basement or attic storage, laundry
facility, pool, roof-deck, balconies, etc. The agreement may specify how and
when these places may be used, and by whom. There may be detailed description of
the current condition of the premises, for comparison with the condition at the
time the premises are surrendered.
When: the term of the rental may be for a night (e.g., a hotel room), weeks,
months, or years. There may be statutory provisions requiring registration of
any rental that could extend for more than a specified number of years (e.g.,
seven) in order to be enforceable against a new landlord. A typical rental is
either annual or month-to-month, and the amount of rent may be different for
long-term renters (because of lower turnover costs). Leaving a long-term lease
before its expiration could result in penalties, or even the cost of the entire
agreed period (if the landlord is unable to find a suitable replacement tenant,
after diligent pursuit). If a tenant stays beyond the end of a lease for a term
of years (one or more), then the parties may agree that the lease will be
automatically renewed, or it may simply convert to a tenancy at will
(month-to-month) at the pro-rated monthly cost of the previous annual lease. If
a tenant at will is given notice to quit the premises, and refuses to do so, the
landlord then begins eviction proceedings. In many places it is completely
illegal to change locks on doors, or remove personal belongings, let alone
forcibly eject a person, without a court order of eviction. There may be strict
rules of procedure, and stiff penalties (triple damages, plus attorneys' fees)
for violations.
How much: Rent may be payable monthly, annually, or in advance, or as otherwise
agreed. A typical arrangement for tenancy at will is "first and last month's
rent" plus a security deposit. The "last month's rent" is rent that has yet to
be earned by the landlord.
Source Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rental_agreement
License Terms:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/