The question is unclear.
If the tenant was successfully evicted, there would be no second opportunity.
Perhaps you mean the landlord started eviction, abandoned it and then started again in six months.
That is fine, he can do that.
There could be exceptions, of course.
Imagine the landlord tried to evict because the person voted for the wrong guy.
The court said you can't do that.
Then the landlord can't evict for some other made-up reason because the first try didn't work.
It must also be remembered that state and local laws may differ. And, different laws apply in other countries.
Probably not. Whether any late fee can be charged depends on your state's laws, but excessive late fees are disallowed in almost every state. A fee as high as yours might even be usury (an illegally high interest rate). The states that do address late fees in their laws usually require that the late fee be agreed to in writing at the beginning of the tenancy. You might consider writing the landlord a letter stating that you are not paying the late fee, and just keep paying the rent. Bear in mind, however, most states allow a landlord to evict a tenant for being late with the rent repeatedly. In Massachusetts, you can be evicted for being late twice in twelve months.
Please help with any advice it would be greatly appreciated
As a tenant, if the landlord wishes to break their own lease, you have the right to seek damages just as they would if you had broken your lease. The usual outcome for a landlord to break a lease is that the landlord forfeits any right to retain the security deposit.
Then he is called a holdover tenant, who can be charged up to twice the amount of normal rent until he leaves, and can be evicted for non-payment if he doesn't pay it.
Proper procedures must be followed according to state and/or local laws regarding this. In Florida you must give the landlord at least a seven-day notice of your intent to fix something that is vital to your living in the home before you can legally offset it from the rent. The repair must not be frivolous and must be of something, like the water heater, that is vital to the function of the home or would make the home uninhabitable if such repair is not made. This said, the landlord can still evict you for non-payment of rent. However you would likely win the case and can seek damages from the landlord of up to three month's rent abatement. Now, if the landlord does evict you in Florida, you can pay what would be the rent amount to the Clerk's Office instead of the Landlord so that you can request a final hearing before a judge or magistrate. If you paid out money to fix something vital in the house you can ask for an emergency hearing to determine rent amount, before you get your final hearing. Whatever the judge says is the amount you have to pay-- most likely it will be your rent minus your repair expense-- and you must pay it immediately in order to have a hearing. Your landlord will get that money, minus the court registry fee of about 14%-- a penalty that will make your landlord think twice about being greedy about the rent!
A tenant can be evicted for habitually paying their rent late. In Massachusetts, being late twice in twelve months is grounds for eviction.
A better question would be If they broke up twice in six months and shes two months pregnant two months after they got back together is she pregnant? And the answer would be yes.
once every other 3 months, and then twice every 7 months...
twice a day
you put vinegar on it for about 2 months you put vinegar on it twice a day for about 2 months
You live in Liverpool lol!!
A bi-monthly magazine publishes every two months, not twice a month. A magazine that appears twice a month is considered a semi-monthly publication.