Valid. Valid. Valid if there is someone to enforce it like a family member, trust, heir or lawyer. Y-THINK-Y
When a tenant dies the death does not automatically end a lease. Each state has their laws with tenant deaths. In one state, the lease will end after 60 days of the death.
If you signed, the lease is binding. You don't have to move in, but you do have to pay the rent. The landlord has an obligation to try to rent the place, but until he does, you have to pay.
As you know a signed lease is a contract between you and the landlord and unless you are lucky enough to have an understanding landlord and you have a very, very good reason to break this contract then you are responsible for the agreement in that contract. Usually people have to pay the first and last months rent and possibly a damage deposit and you may lose that. You have tied up the landlord from renting to someone else, so it would be to your best interest to offer to let him/her keep the first months rent. Talk to the new landlord and hopefully your reasons for not moving in are valid and you just haven't found a better place to move too. You may just get lucky.
This depends on the terms of your lease. Normally breaking a lease for any reason is grounds for the landlord to keep your deposit. If there are valid grounds for breaking the lease and the landlord keeps your deposit you can sue him for the amount he kept.
No, only the owner of the property would be able to break the agreement assuming the landlord had valid reason(s) for taking the action.
Bedbugs are not covered as pests in standard pest control/extermination. Therefore if you break your lease because of the presence of bed bugs, then you're breaking your lease without valid reason, and can face the consequences resulting thereof.
If you signed, the lease is binding. You don't have to move in, but you do have to pay the rent. The landlord has an obligation to try to rent the place, but until he does, you have to pay.
For the rental lease agreement to be valid in the United States court of law it has to be signed by the Landlord and Tenant.
Yes.
Signing the lease and paying the security deposit are two separate issues. Furthermore, if you don't pay the security deposit then you could be in violation of the lease terms and be evicted if the landlord chooses. Normally you pay the security deposit before you and your landlord sign the lease, or work out a payment plan that you and your landlord agree to. If your landlord agreed to allow you to skip the security deposit then that part of the lease is waived and the rest of the lease stands.
If YOU, his legal spouse, signed the lease - then he cannot be evicted. If no one ever signed a valid lease, then you can all be evicted.
Yes, and will be upheld in court. Unless items are in violation of the Landlord act of that state. If the lease is not "breaking" your states landlord act they are valid even if they sound absurd.
Only if the landlord commited the burglary.
If the landlord accepts your rent and you pay it, after the lease is signed, then it generall doesn't matter whether it's properly dated. If the lease was supposed to be for a specific period such as one year and the date was omitted, that could benefit either party depending on the circumstances.
Chances are that the answer is yes. I mean if a lease is valid when it's done orally, and no one has a copy, then if you signed it that's it.
Most leases will have a provision on it that the landlord can make some changes on the lease with a notice of at least 30-days before the next rent is due. But these changes cannot be radical.
Lease is valid as of the date on the document. The month-to-month deal was an arrangement outside the legal confines of the lease agreement. A point should be made that the lease agreement supercedes all other informal agreements regarding the rented property.
Yes! The married couple is considered a "community" and are. . . . .both. . . . .liable for the rent and upholding the lease!