No you would need that you should tell a lawyer
There is no obligation for a landlord to take Section 8.
Yes. It's not always the landlord that owns the apartment block, but a company and he has to go by the rules. The company has a right to a degree to decide who to rent too and refuse cosigners.
The landlord refuses to return personal property until the balance of his rent has been paid. 3 months have passed.
In most states YES, but in some states NO. Check with your state.
Your agreement with the landlord is documented in your lease. Read it to find a clause that covers the situation you describe. Mold is vigorous and does not respect condominium unit boundaries, and in this situation, you may want to report the mold to the association. The governing documents for the community may specify that an owner is required to maintain the interior of the unit in a healthy condition: mold is unhealthy. Working with your landlord and with the association will be more effective in controlling and eliminating the mold situation than simply refusing to pay your rent.
yes he can, he has every authority to....its his building and he has the right to
No. A landlord has no right to refuse to rent you an apartment because of your race religion sexual preference have children or on social assistance.
Only if that term was in your written rental agreement.
You're essentially declining a lease agreement, so yes. But you're telling the landlord, that you are moving by doing so.
Yes The rent is due until the day tenant returns keys and moves out with all their belongings. If you mean a last-month-rent deposit, then yes, the landlord can ask for one, and, if the tenant doesn't want to give one, the landlord can refuse to rent to them. It's always better (for everyone) to have the agreement in writing.
Refuse.
Of course they can.
There is no obligation for a landlord to take Section 8.
no the land lord cannot refuse to give receipt
Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.
Yes. It's not always the landlord that owns the apartment block, but a company and he has to go by the rules. The company has a right to a degree to decide who to rent too and refuse cosigners.
"A tenant’s duty regarding rent payments is to tender to the landlord an offer of the full amount of rent owed within the time allowed by law and by the rental agreement provisions regarding payment. A landlord may refuse to accept a rent tender that is for less than the full amount of rent owed or that is untimely."You can read more about duty to pay rent at the link.https://www.oregonlaws.org/ors/90.417