Sentences with phrase «to rented premises»

Fire damage to rented premises for which you are legally liable under common law (not because of a contract) is covered under Bodily Injury and Property Damage Liability.
In the proposed deal, the Kunstverein would have sold the building, which would have been demolished, and rented premises in the bank's new construction on the site.
In the early years in Melbourne, activities were based in the homes of the organisation's members, moving to rented premises as the organisation expanded.
A tenant who rents a premises on a monthly basis must give his or her landlord notice on or before the first day of the last tenancy month that the tenant will live in the premises (also known as giving «one clear month» notice).
Naming your landlord as additional insured can cause coverage issues if you cause damage to the apartment or other rented premises.
'' «reasonable efforts» mean those steps that the landlord would have taken to rent the premises if they had been vacated in due course, provided that those steps are in accordance with local rental practice for similar properties» from Wis..
The Cass will continue to rent the premises until 2017, when it will move to a new site in north London.
In a fixed tenancy, the tenant agrees to rent the premises for a certain length of time for a certain amount of rent.
Naming your landlord as additional insured can cause coverage issues if you cause damage to the apartment or other rented premises.
Mr Boadi also announced that the OMA was going to construct a new divisional police complex at Gausu, also a suburb, to move the police from their rented premise.
If someone is injured in your apartment or on your rented premises, medical payments to others is a coverage that takes care of small injuries suffered by guests before they become liability claims.
Liability coverage on renters insurance covers major damage to the rented premises caused by your negligence.
That doesn't require fault to be proven, only that the injury happen to your guest in or around your rented premises.
When you are responsible for a fire, you are responsible for damage to others as well as damage to the rented premises you live in.
In addition, your liability coverage is somewhat limited with regards to damage to rented premises.
Enhanced home includes water backup, liability coverage for water damage to rented premises, as well as open perils coverage.
Liability for water damage to the rented premises — also known as «your apartment» — is not part of that carve back, so there's no coverage.
Damages To Rented Premises — Check your policy language, of course, but these policies often can pay for accidental damage to rented premises as a result of the event.
Coverage for damage done by guests to a rented premises is going to be tricky under a standard renters insurance policy.
In the case of liability for water damage to rented premises, companies handle this with more variation.
Liability for damage to your «rented premises» is covered in an exclusion, but then coverage is carved back for property damage caused by fire, smoke, or explosion.
In most states, there is an assumption that the tenant is liable for damage to the rented premises, accidental or otherwise.
The renter, or lessee, is the person who lives in the rented premises, and the landlord, or lessor, is the person who owns those premises and holds them for rent.
This means that you're protected from and defended against liability for damage to the rented premises from smoke, fire, explosion, and water.
A Georgia renters insurance policy can protect you from liability for damage to rented premises.
Liability coverage for damage to rented premises is often limited to fire, smoke, and explosion.
Outside the rented premises, of course, the liability coverage applies to any bodily injury or property damage that you cause.
It's not for damage that the animal does to the rented premises.
You'll find no coverage for damage from your pets to the rented premises, for a couple of reasons.
First, liability coverage for damage to rented premises is often limited to a few select types of losses, such as fire, water, smoke, and explosion.
Damage to rented premises, however, has some special limitations on it.
Also current city of residence (rented premises) is same as the location of the property rented out.
If you negligently cause bodily injury or property damage to someone else — or to the rented premises in specific situations — the policy would pay for that loss.
In the event of a fire or other loss to the rented premises for which multiple people are responsible, each policy could potentially respond to defend and pay for the portion of the loss attributable to the insured.
Can organizations that lease or rent their premises and do not have a separate meter become bullfrogpowered?
Tenant's Notice of Intent to Move is a written notice by Tenant stating the intention to move out from the rented premises.
This document can be used by a Tenant to notify the Landlord informing of the unhealthy and unsafe condition of the rented premise.
You would like to notify the Landlord of the unhealthy and unsafe condition of the rented premise and request that Landlord make the necessary repairs.
Has it instructed its Tenancy Dispute Officers to investigate more thoroughly all instances in which tenants are served with notice of hearings under section 57 (3)(b) of the Act, i.e., by posting of the notice in a prominent place on the rented premises?
Therefore Mr. Hewitt, his alleged landlord, served Mr. Barlow with notice of the RTDRS hearing by taping the notice to the door of the rented premises.
However, on January 8, Mr. Barlow returned to the rented premises and found that the locks had been changed and an order taped to the door.
When Mr. Barlow returned to the rented premises on December 22, he again contacted the RTDRS and was told that he should expect a notice of a rescheduled hearing in the mail.
Section 57 (3)(b) of the Act provides that, if a landlord is unable to serve a tenant because the tenant is absent from the rented premises or evading service, then service may be made by posting the documents «in a conspicuous place on some part of the premises.»
In this case, Mr. Barlow, the tenant, worked out of town and so was absent from the rented premises.
I have already noted Master Robertson's incorrect assumption that substitutional service was granted by order; instead, the Act itself specifically authorized the landlord to post notice of the hearing on the door of the rented premises in the absence of the tenant.
growing practice by unscrupulous residential tenants to manipulate the law improperly, and often dishonestly, to enable them to remain in their rented premises for long periods of time without having to pay rent to their landlords.
[1] My recent experience sitting as a single judge of this Court to hear motions has convinced me that there is a growing practice by unscrupulous residential tenants to manipulate the law improperly, and often dishonestly, to enable them to remain in their rented premises for long periods of time without having to pay rent to their landlords.
In a Divisional Court decision released earlier this month, Justice Matlow noted the «growing practice by unscrupulous residential tenants to manipulate the law improperly, and often dishonestly, to enable them to remain in their rented premises for long periods of time without having to pay rent to their landlords» and called on the Ontario Government, the Landlord Tenant Board (the «LTB») and the Courts to respond.
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