Yes it does constitute a written notice.
Another View: (in the US) NO, an e-mail does NOT serve as a legal notice because there is no confirmation that it was sent by an individual who had the legal "standing" to send it - or sent to a valid e-mail address - or received by the person for whom it was intended.
Yes you can but your better off taping it to their door
Yes. Period.
It may be used IF you receive email comfirmation from the landlord (or the tenant as the case may be) that your email notice was received AND if the email addresses reflect the identities of the parties. However, make certain that you keep copies.
VERY doubtful. Most legal contracts must actually bear the written signatures of the signatories.
An email disclaimer is a notice or warning which is added to an outgoing email. Its main purpose is avoid possible exposure to legal threats.
withdraw inboxserver
This occurs if you send an email to a non-existent email account or server.
bulletin, information, letter, news, notice
For example, if you read an email and its something important and you will take care of it later, you can mark it unread again so you notice it on the next time you go check your email.
If you put your parents email when you signed up and they made a parent account to monitor you, yes it will most likely sent a email to them
i am pretty sure that you do get a delivery failure notice, but only if you try to send the email to the person who has blocked you. if you send an email to the person who has blocked you, they will never get the email, and it is just the matter of time when you will get a delivery failure notification in your inbox. i am not sure when will you get the notification, but i am pretty sure that you will get it. it probably wont notify you right after you send the email. it can a lot longer, but im not sure how long exactly.
If the email cannot go through, it "bounces" back with a notice to a sender. Bounced mail can be because of a wrong address or a server overload.