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If the breach resulted in rent being owed, then yes, the landlord can use the deposit to pay that arrearage (and then sue for the rest).
Yes! If the back rent and repairs are less than the deposit you have to give them the remainder of the deposit. But you could always makeup some bullcrap fee to eat up the rest of it like most landlords do.
Yes, you can. You violated the contract that was established by taking the deposit. Unless there was some restrictions on the deposit such as You have to confirm that you want to purchase within 5 days, or you have 10 days to present the rest of the money, otherwise I can sell to someone else.
Property auctions work by auctioning properties to the public and one must pay a 10% deposit if they are successful. They are given a set amount of time to pay the rest in full and if they fail they lose the deposit.
Sedimentation is the deposit of materials carried by a flowing body, such as a stream.
Yes. However, it is a recurring infection, so you never totally "survive" it. One you contract it, you will have it the rest of your life.
Signing the lease and paying the security deposit are two separate issues. Furthermore, if you don't pay the security deposit then you could be in violation of the lease terms and be evicted if the landlord chooses. Normally you pay the security deposit before you and your landlord sign the lease, or work out a payment plan that you and your landlord agree to. If your landlord agreed to allow you to skip the security deposit then that part of the lease is waived and the rest of the lease stands.
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the answer is sort of usually you pay a deposit so the fitters can get started then after all the work is done you pay the rest of the money.
no the deposit is money you give to a company is sort of like you saying 'hey look here is some money i have more so i can pay do it and you'll get the rest' so basically you should not pay anything after a deposit until it is done. There have been scams where builders take a deposit and keep asking for money each week then run with the money and leave your house in shambles.
Just ask the bank to do an electronic transfer. You'll need the senders bank account information and your own - the bank will do the rest.