Dictionary Definition
landlord n : a landowner who leases to
others
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Related terms
Translations
person who owns and rents land such as a house,
apartment, or condo
- Czech: pronajímatel
- Dutch: huisbaas
- Finnish: vuokranantaja, vuokraisäntä
- German: Vermieter
- Kurdish: ,
- Maltese: sid , sidt
- Serbian: stanodavac
- Spanish: casero casera
owner or manager of a public house
- Dutch: huisbaas
- Finnish: omistaja
- Kurdish:
- Serbian: stanodavac
Extensive Definition
Landlord is the owner of a house, apartment, condominium, or real estate
which is rented or leased to an individual or
business, who is called a tenant
(also a lessee or renter). When a juristic
person is in this position the term landlord is used. Other
terms include lessor and owner. The term landlady may be used in
some jurisdictions for female owners, but landlord can
apply to both sexes.
History of landlording
See also Tenement.Landlording may be traced back to the Roman
Empire and the manorial system (seignorialism), which
began under it — peasants were bound to the land and dependent on
their landlords for protection and justice. Under the feudalism such relations
became widespread.
Landlord and tenant
The two parties step into relationship under the
law of real estate property by signing a contract called lease.
With this contract the one party, which has superior title to the
property, ie the landlord, grads possession and use of it for a
limited period to the other party, ie the tenant. The landlord may
not be the actual owner of the property but keeping in some way the
right to sub-lease.
A rental
agreement, or lease, is the contract defining such terms as
the price paid, penalties for late payments, the length of the
rental or lease, and the amount of notice required before either
the landlord or tenant cancels the agreement. In general,
responsibilities are given as follow: the landlord is responsible
for making repairments and property maintenance, and the tenant is
responsible for keeping the property clean and safe.
Many landlords hire a property
management company to take care of all the details of renting
their property out to a tenant. This usually includes advertising
the property and showing it to prospective tenants, and then, once
rented, collecting rent from the tenant and performing repairs as
needed.
In the United
States, landlord-tenant disputes are primarily governed by
state
law (not federal law)
regarding property and
contracts. State law
and, in some places, city law or county law, sets the requirements
for eviction of a
tenant. Generally, there are a limited number of reasons for which
a landlord can evict his or her tenant before the expiration of the
tenancy, though at the end of the lease term the rental
relationship can generally be terminated without giving any reason.
Some cities have laws establishing the maximum rent a landlord can
charge, known as rent
control, and related
just cause eviction controls. There is also an
implied warranty of habitability, whereby a landlord must
maintain safe, decent and habitable housing, meeting minimum safety
requirements such as smoke detectors and a locking door.
Sometimes the terms "slumlord" or "ghetto landlord"
are used in reference to the owner of dilapidated buildings in
blighted urban areas. As a result of declining demand and declining
real
estate prices, these landlords were often left with completely
unprofitable properties and found themselves unable to pay for
renovation and the regular maintenance of their property. The
situation in many American slums became so dire that some landlords
were convicted of arson
after they arranged to have their own buildings set on fire in an
attempt to collect on the insurance policy.
Aside of bad or leading to lawsuits relations
between landlord and tenant, these relations as written and shown
by Robert Burns (1759 - 1796) may keep warmth and mutual
delight.
Licensed victualler
In the United Kingdom the owner and/or manager of a public house (pub) is also called the "landlord", "publican", or "licensee". In a more formal way the term used is licensed victualler. A female landlord can either be called a landlady or simply landlord.A charity called the Licensed Victualler's
National Homes exists to serve the retirement needs of Britain's
pub landlords. The charity also runs a private boarding school, in
Ascot, Berkshire, which in addition to regular fee-paying pupils,
provides discounted education prices for the children of landlords
and others in the catering industry.
Notes
See also
- Anti-Rent War
- Absentee landlord
- Eviction
- Housing tenure
- Land tenure
- Landlords insurance
- Landlord harassment
- Landrecht
- Peter Rachman, notorious slum landlord of the 1950s and 1960s.
landlord in Scottish Gaelic: Uachdaran
landlord in Japanese: 地主
landlord in Russian: Помещик
landlord in Chinese: 土地主
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
beneficiary, cestui, cestui que trust, cestui
que use, deedholder,
feoffee, feudatory, freeholder, host, hostess, householder, innkeeper, laird, landlady, landowner, lord, manager, master, mesne, mesne lord, mine host,
mistress, owner, property owner, proprietary, proprietor, proprietress, proprietrix, publican, receptionist, rentier, squire, titleholder