no the land lord cannot refuse to give receipt
Of course they can.
There is nothing that prohibits that refusal - the tenant can always go get a cashier's check. Some landlords will refuse personal checks if the tenant has bounced checks in the past. Also, some landlords will insist on only taking cash, then refuse to give a receipt. Only an idiot would pay cash and not get a receipt.
The landlord keeps the copy, the tenent keeps the original.
Most states require that the landlord issue a receipt upon tenant's payment of their rent. If the tenant writes a check or uses a credit/debit card, their canceled check or transaction record (credit/debit card receipt generated by the printer) can substitute for a receipt.
not in any state. To get repairs, the tenant needs to give the LL 30 days to make any repairs. If not done, the tenant is to call licensed contractors who do the kinds of work done that the tenant needs done. THE tenant pays the contractor and gets a receipt. The tenant gives a copy of the receipt and any remaining rent [gross rent minus that amount paid for repairs] due to the landlord.
If your landlord accepted the security deposit from you he must return to you unless he have legal grounds to keep all or part of the security deposit. I don't think that the loss of your receipt for the security deposit is enough to allow your landlord to keep it. Thus you can sue him.
The landlord refuses to return personal property until the balance of his rent has been paid. 3 months have passed.
No you would need that you should tell a lawyer
Yes, he can. Avoid this kind of delay by being smart when renting. Always insist on a walk through both when first renting and before returning the keys when you move out. Take pictures as you go through the home. Keep receipts of carpet cleaning or other repairs you had done. Alternatively, you can provide evidence of prompt payment and professional references of your character. If the landlord keeps your deposit or later refuses references, your records will see you through.
Depends on the store where you are returning a gift. There is no law that covers returns. A store may refuse a return under any condition, give a refund for a limited period of time, require a receipt for returns, etc. Check with the store.
That would be a matter that's between the landlord and the lender or bankruptcy trustee, not the tenant. As long as the landlord has control of the property he still has the right to collect rent and evict you if the rent isn't paid. If the property is taken over by a new entity, that entity becomes your landlord and they will give you further instructions.
what did Alexander II refuse to give them? Answer this question…