No. A minor cannot be party to a contract.
Yes, you can break your lease if your landlord refuses to fix things, as long as this is specified in the lease. Your landlord is liable for keeping the home in working order and safe. Contact an attorney to help you with the lease.
Yes he can. A violation of the terms of a lease by a landlord is just as much grounds for termination by the tenant. The landlord can still evict you but less likely will win.
No. That's not the landlord's fault.
Sometimes when living situations do not work, a person must be removed from a lease. Usually, a person only has to speak with the landlord, and the landlord will remove the person from the lease.
A contract of lease cannot be broken if the tenant has been threatened by his neighbor unless the landlord permits. A tenant can talk the matter over with his landlord.
The landlord must give you a copy of your lease within 30 days. There is usually a paper you both sign saying you received it. If it is lost you are not liable to stay in the apartment. On the other hand, this also means the landlord can evict you or raise your rent on you without warning because of no proper documentation.
The cast of The Broken Lease - 1912 includes: Grace Lewis as Mrs. William Gleason Hayward Mack as The Landlord
i would fine a way to see if he is braking the lease in any way and than take that to a judge and have him sign you out of your lease but you have to have proof the your landlord is braking hin lease with you
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.
It completely depends on the situation. Was the lease broken by the tenant or the landlord?
Since the default has nothing to do with the landlord, and is not his fault, you would be breaching the lease, and would be liable for the rent until the end of the lease, unless he rerents it.
Check your lease agreement. If it is not stated in your lease agreement that felons are not permitted, then you have not broken any part of the agreement and the landlord is in violation of your contract. Sue him for breach.