Yes: as long a you are a tenant in a dwelling at the hands of a landlord, you are renting from him and must pay rent.
If you break the lease, your landlord can charge you the amount of rent for the apartment or unit during the time it is left unoccupied up until the dwelling has been rented out or until your lease expires, whichever comes first.
well in my book he's the landlord so he can do whatever he wants favours wise I suppose..
Two equal charges will repel one another. Two different charges (i.e., a positive and a negative charge) will attract one another.
Two like charges (either two positive charges, or two negative charges) will repel one another.
This is one of the fundamental laws of charges. Like charges repel, and opposite charges, your positive and negative ones, attract each other.
Normally, the landlord does not charge for water. In most states it is illegal for landlords to charge their tenants separate utilities. However, the landlord can have utilities in its own name, the bills of which can be passed over to the tenant for payment. Also the tenant is not allowed to charge for water and sewer to tenant of multi family attached units (such as apartments).
The Force on a point charge from another point charge is along the Line connecting between the two charges. The direction will be towards the point charge if the two charges are different and away if they are same.Now if you collection of Charges then it is vector sum of force due to each charge.
It may depend on how the lease was terminated but unless the charges are based on a previous agreement, the landlord cannot spring this on you.
what can a landlord charge to move in a California house rental?
Yes when a charge is brought near to a electric charge ,then it will cause a change the electric field of the charge depending on the polarity of the both charges.
not
No, each charge acts independently of the others. Unless the additional charges cause a redistribution of the existing charges.