no
Yes, if the landlord was apprised of the unhealthy conditions, did nothing to mitigate the situation and it can be proven the dog died as a result of the landlord's failure to act.Yes, if the landlord was apprised of the unhealthy conditions, did nothing to mitigate the situation and it can be proven the dog died as a result of the landlord's failure to act.Yes, if the landlord was apprised of the unhealthy conditions, did nothing to mitigate the situation and it can be proven the dog died as a result of the landlord's failure to act.Yes, if the landlord was apprised of the unhealthy conditions, did nothing to mitigate the situation and it can be proven the dog died as a result of the landlord's failure to act.
Nothing.
The landlord's bankruptcy has nothing to do with the tenant. The tenant still owes the rent.
If the landlord has a reasonable issue to complain about and you do nothing to address the problem the landlord's continued complaints do not constitute "harassment". They have a right to complain.
Because it is just a place in time that nothing relative happens
Your answer depends on what you want to do.If the rent is paid for the full term of the lease agreement, then the landlord cannot rent the unit until the rent runs out.The landlord may want access to the unit to confirm that everything in the unit remains undamaged.If the landlord wants to rent the unit just because it's vacant, the landlord should refund the 'unused' rent to the departed tenant.
Yes. The relationship between the landlord and bank has nothing to do with the tenant.
That has nothing to do with the tenant.
Nothing. Just keep paying your rent. The landlord's relationship with his bank has nothing to do with you. And, if he does get foreclosed, federal law gives you lots of time before the bank can move you out.
No. If the property is about to be foreclosed, the landlord has no obligation to give the tenant any notice of anything. After the foreclosure, the landlord will have nothing to do with the tenant.
It is the tenants responsibility to pay for the repair as they are occupying the property and it istheirmain home. The landlord has nothing to do with it.
Yes. Housing law has nothing to do with immigration law, and a landlord has no obligation to investigate a prospective tenant's citizenship status. Furthermore, federal housing law prohibits discrimination based on race or ethnicity. The landlord who refuses to rent to someone because of a question of citizenship is probably basing his concern on ethnicity. Does the landlord ask every prospective tenant, or just those who look "foreign."