You're not.
Only a serious breach by the landlord - like substantial, ongoing code violations - would allow a tenant to break the lease.
The baby is coming!
Yes this is one of the best and legal way to break your lease. But you need to make sure that you will give some proofs to your landlord for them to believe you. Landlord will legally allow the tenant to move out especially if they really have medical condition that can badly affect the community.
Yes my sister broke her lease due to a medical issue. You need to explain your problem to your landlord and chances are he will let you out of your lease. If he doesn't, go to landlords and tenants court and ask for a show cause petition to break a lease. Have documentation supporting your claims.
Landlords give all sorts of crazy reasons for wanting to break leases. This is one of the strangest I have ever heard. A lease is a legal contract. It may contain a clause describing how the landlord can break it. The landlord may have sold the building for a whole lot of money. If he can get you out without having to pay you to break the lease then he gets to keep more money. His short sale does not involve you. He has a different motive. His short sale does not give him the right to break a lease. Your problem is your lease with him.
You can break a lease to move for work--but the landlord has the rights noted in the lease. Providing 30 days notice and talking to him about the reasons for your move may reduce the money they expect for you to pay to get out of the lease. If you have a letter of employment from the new job may help. A job in the military is usually the only work-related reason for getting out of a lease early.
One can takeover a car lease relatively easily. Usually the person wanting to break their lease is doing this for financial reasons. To takeover a car lease, one needs to amend the lease papers and than they can take over the lease for the rest of the term at the same payment plan as before.
They can TERMINATE a lease, if the lessee is in violation of the lease.
My roommate will not agree for me to break the lease. She has insulted me doesn't pay bills on time and is emotionally draining on me. I want to break the lease but she will not let me break it what can i do?
This depends: if you can demonstrate that there is a history of criminal activities, and one of which you are a victim of that type of criminal activity, then you might be able to break the lease. Keep in mind that any time you break a lease your landlord could keep the deposit. But if you break the lease for constructive reasons, such as the fact that your landlord is not doing enough to keep the property secure, safe, and decent, then you can sue the landlord for your deposit back and probably win. However, if you want to break a lease simply because you are victim of a crime that occurred on the property, that reason alone will probably not be a legal excuse.
Can you break a lease when renting within 24 hours in virginia