tenancy$82193$ - definição. O que é tenancy$82193$. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é tenancy$82193$ - definição

LEGAL TERM
Tenancy deposit; Tenancy bond

Assured tenancy         
  • County Court]].<br />An assured tenancy that is not shorthold provides the tenant with the option of holding over at its end, implying a statutory periodic tenancy, which calls on the landlord to obtain an order for possession to evict if the landlord has a valid statutory ground.<ref>[http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1988/50/section/7 Housing Act 1988 s. 7]</ref>
TYPE OF HOUSING TENANCY IN THE UNITED KINGDOM
Innominate tenancy; Furnished tenancy; Assured tenancies; Assured tenants
An assured tenancy is a legal category of residential tenancy to an individual (or individuals jointly) in English land law. Statute affords a tenant under an assured tenancy a degree of security of tenure.
leasehold         
OWNERSHIP OF A TEMPORARY RIGHT TO HOLD LAND OR PROPERTY
Leasehold; Tenants; Leaseholder; Tenancy at will; Tenancy at sufferance; Landlord and tenant; Tenancy; Leasehold estates; Holdover tenancy; Landlord and Tenant; Estate for years; Covenant of quiet enjoyment; Tenancies; Month-to-month; Term of years; Term of years absolute; At-will tenancy; Tenantry; Tennancy; Rental home; Rental housing; Term lease; Perpetual lease; Lease in perpetuity; Freeholding lease; Residential tenancy; Tenant at will; Tenants at will
n. the real estate which is the subject of a lease (a written rental agreement for an extended period of time). The term is commonly used to describe improvements on real property when the improvements are built on land owned by one party which is leased for a long term (such as 99 years) to the owner of the building. For example, the Pacific Land Company owns a lot and leases it for 99 years to the Highrise Development Corporation, which builds a 20-story apartment building and sells each apartment to individual owners as condominiums. At the end of the 99 years the building has to be moved (impossible), torn down, sold to Pacific (which need not pay much since the building is old and Highrise has no choice), or a new lease negotiated. Obviously, toward the end of the 99 years the individual condominiums will go down in value, partly from fear of lessened resale potential. This is generally theoretical (except to lending companies because the security does not include the land) since there are few buildings with less than 50 or 60 years to go on the leases or their expected lifetimes, although there are some commercial buildings which are within 20 years of termination of such leases. In most cases the buildings are obsolete by the end of the leasehold. See also: condominium lease
tenancy         
OWNERSHIP OF A TEMPORARY RIGHT TO HOLD LAND OR PROPERTY
Leasehold; Tenants; Leaseholder; Tenancy at will; Tenancy at sufferance; Landlord and tenant; Tenancy; Leasehold estates; Holdover tenancy; Landlord and Tenant; Estate for years; Covenant of quiet enjoyment; Tenancies; Month-to-month; Term of years; Term of years absolute; At-will tenancy; Tenantry; Tennancy; Rental home; Rental housing; Term lease; Perpetual lease; Lease in perpetuity; Freeholding lease; Residential tenancy; Tenant at will; Tenants at will
n. the right to occupy real property permanently, for a time which may terminate upon a certain event, for a specific term, for a series of periods until cancelled (such as month-to-month), or at will (which may be terminated at any time). Some tenancy is for occupancy only as in a landlord-tenant situation, or a tenancy may also be based on ownership of title to the property. See also: joint tenancy landlord and tenant tenancy at sufferance tenancy at will tenancy by the entirety tenancy in common tenant title

Wikipédia

Damage deposit

A damage deposit or deposit is a sum of money paid in relation to a rented item to ensure it is returned in good condition. They are particularly common in relation to rented accommodation, where they may also be referred to as a tenancy deposit, bond deposit, or bond.

The owner of the item (the landlord in the case of accommodation) will take a sum of money from the person(s) renting the item (the tenant). If the item is returned in good condition at the conclusion of the tenancy the owner should return the deposit. If the item is returned with damage beyond normal wear and tear, the cost of repairing that damage may be charged against the deposit, and part (or none) of the deposit will be returned.

In some jurisdictions such as the Australian states of Victoria and Queensland and in New Zealand, bond funds are held in trust by a government body and released upon agreement from both parties; failing accord of the two parties, an independent tribunal determines the distribution of the bond. In the United Kingdom deposits for all assured shorthold tenancies must be held in a tenancy deposit scheme, under the terms of the Housing Act 2004.