If that was the contract, yes.
Not in most states.
Yes.
Physical damage, or non-payment of rent.
The entry for a bill discounting to be dishonored is made when the drawee refuses to accept or make payment on the bill. It is dishonored by non-acceptance or non-payment.
No.
Sewage is non-biodegradable.
no he has to first get your written permission to enter your home and he cant remove anything
Yes, sure!
If you were evicted for non-payment of rent, your landlord COULD file a lien against you for the unpaid amount.
As long as you're in the apartment your rent is still due. If the landlord is evicting you for any other reason except non-payment of rent you still must pay while the case is still pending. If it's for non-payment your court's clerk's office should tell you if you should pay the landlord or the Clerk's Registry.
J. A. Dowling has written: 'Ejectment for non-payment of rent' -- subject(s): Eviction, Landlord and tenant
DISHONOUR OF THE BILL OF EXCHANGEWhen the Bill of exchange is not accepted by the drawee, or payment is not made against the bill by the drawee, the bill is is said to be dishonoured. A Bill is dishonoured in the following two conditions:1-DISHONOUR BY NON-ACCEPTANCEIf the Drawee refuses to accept the bill, it is known as Dishonour of the bill of exchange by non-acceptance.2-DISHONOUR BY NON-PAYMENTIf the drawee doesn't pay a certain amount of money when the bill is shown on maturity, the bill gets dishonoured due to Non-payment.