Normally leases are not signed until the day of moving. If the home was not ready to be moved into then the landlord should not be presenting the lease to be signed, and the tenant should not sign it until such dwellings is ready.
Compensation should be made for the problem, but if the lease is signed, it is in force. Check with your state for the possible remedies you have for failure to have a habitable place.
I wouldn't imagine so, if you have a contract with the expected move in date and the landlord can not honour that, then the contract will be broken.
Does the lease say it would be ready by now? If the landlord has not fulfilled his end of the contract, you shouldn't be obligated to uphold yours. You should probably speak with a local attorney. If the lease doesn't actually specify a move-in date, then it's trickier. Again, you should speak with an attorney.
It was 1861
You need to review your particular lease. A lease is usually enforceable until the termination date in the lease agreement.You need to review your particular lease. A lease is usually enforceable until the termination date in the lease agreement.You need to review your particular lease. A lease is usually enforceable until the termination date in the lease agreement.You need to review your particular lease. A lease is usually enforceable until the termination date in the lease agreement.
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.
I m pretty sure that the end date constitutes termination.
We need to know “what” was signed to give a date.
Technically, yes. If you never took residency (and never accepted keys to your unit), there could not possibly be any damage that was caused by you. However, you may wish to worry about fees involved in breaking a lease - you may have to forfeit a month or two's rent!
That depends on what the lease says.
In Texas, you can only get your deposit back if your application is rejected and/or you have 3 days from the date of application to chane your mind. After that, you are not eligible to et your "application deposit" back.
A succeeding lease is one that immediately follows the expiration date of the existing lease. In other words, if a person leases an office suite on a yearly basis, and continues to renew the release, it will become a succeeding lease, and go into effect the day after the expiration date on the original lease.