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The URLTA is the closest document that we have to “Federal” Landlord Tenant Laws. However, state participation is encouraged but not mandatory, and therefore not all states have adopted this legislation.
Most states have adopted parts, if not all, of the URLTA. As of 2008, significant influence of this act can be found in the state statutes of Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and Washington.
Nice discussion going on landlord tenant laws of different states. All landlords and tenants should know the laws so that they never face any problem in future. I have no more idea regarding this. My uncle faces some problem last month and by Rocket Eviction, the eviction service provider of Las Vegas his problem solved. Thanks for sharing. Hope all will be benefited by this.
There's Adds in the borders, but the payoff is the "Blue Section" of terms and definitions for related section. But it's unclear whether the statutes are '2020 up to date'- for understanding start with with Lawserver. To check CURRENT, see "Lexis"
================= CURRENT (updated, to my knowlege as bills pass) is Lexis "Free Portal"... Kind of hard to navigage.
The CUrrent Statutes for State of TN (2020) , per ULTRA (sp?) begin at
Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-28-101
The "link" following points to the "Open Portal" of Lexis/Nexis, (the CURRENT statures in Nashville) but will drop you on page 1, from there you'll have to hunt for §66 et seq.
Another section "Leases" (I assume for counties under 75,000 population, it seems ULTRA is N/a) these seem related (some clauses regarding disabled people appear here), but it's unclear "why" the 2 seperate sections.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-7-101
Again, the "link" dumps a user to "Page 1", then "find it"
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