Ask the landlord if you can get pet because a neighbor got pets, and hold a good argument.
This will depend on your state law: in some states the landlord is allowed to keep your property; in others they must put it in storage; while in others they must put it on the curbside
It was a deal in which the Japanese government agreed to control emigration to the United States. =APEX
the reason the northern states allowed slave trade to continue was so they could have laws they wanted passed to be agreed with by the southern states. within doing this, there was a compromise and the northern states agreed to it. so, the slaves we left as property to the plantation owners and northern states didn't have to return run away slaves to their owners.
No. Mexicans are allowed to enter the United States once the Mexican and American governments have agreed for the immigrants to enter the country legally. Any immigrants from any country are allowed to enter the United States once the government has agreed for them to enter legally.
In most states if you break your lease you are responsible for the rent for each month the unit is vacant, up until it is rented out or until the leases expired, whichever comes first. Furthermore your landlord will be allowed to keep your security deposit.
If you have a lease that states the rental to be paid, and does not list changes if others move in, then your landlord cannot increase your rent until it is time to renew the lease. If you have a lease that specifies more rent if more people live in the residence, then you have already agreed to the increase. If you have no lease, your landlord can change the rent at any time, for any reason, unless your local laws say otherwise.
In most states, the landlord is forbidden from having the tenant pay for lights in the common area. The landlord should have a separate meter for those lights.
This depends on the policy of your landlord. In most leases it states when, where, and how you pay your rent.
Yes, no matter if your lease states it or not, the landlord can legally do this if you're behind on rent.
In most states this is prohibited in a residential landlord/tenant rule.
In some states, the lease survives the sale; in others, it does not. Regardless, the landlord certainly has the right to sell.
Most states require the landlord to place the deposit in an interest-bearing account, protected from his creditors.