ESPECIAL:LY in the USA you really need a lawyer to handle this issue. Do'n't assume. Even in Canada some fifty year leases on native (First Nations) land you had to REMOVE all traces of your cabin/house and return the land as natural. Some areas in big cities there was a "re-negotiation" concerning high end homes, as many were owned by native band MEMBERS, so there was an incentive. But no guarantee. your lease ends you're OUT. In one recreatiion area the provincial govt. GAVE the land to long term leaseholders as they wanted to TAX revenue!! It never made the news but i knew a family that had owned the lease since WW2!. Now, it's their land! Now PAY.
Correct. Every lease is different. However, at the end of the day, a lease typically has an expiration date. Unless it says otherwise, lessees aren't entitled to stay once the lease has expired.
ESPECIAL:LY in the USA you really need a lawyer to handle this issue. Do'n't assume. Even in Canada some fifty year leases on native (First Nations) land you had to REMOVE all traces of your cabin/house and return the land as natural. Some areas in big cities there was a "re-negotiation" concerning high end homes, as many were owned by native band MEMBERS, so there was an incentive. But no guarantee. your lease ends you're OUT. In one recreatiion area the provincial govt. GAVE the land to long term leaseholders as they wanted to TAX revenue!! It never made the news but i knew a family that had owned the lease since WW2!. Now, it's their land! Now PAY.
Correct. Every lease is different. However, at the end of the day, a lease typically has an expiration date. Unless it says otherwise, lessees aren't entitled to stay once the lease has expired.