30 days in writing if by notice you mean eviction
The Landlord has a duty to mitigate damages (in other words, to attempt to find a replacement tenant). However, if the Landlord is unable to find a replacement, the Landlord can bring a cause of action for breach of contract and is entitled to a full judgment of the remainder of the contract unless the vacated tenant can show frustration of purpose or some other appropriate remedy. The 30-day notice is irrelevant as to this scenario.
Your landlord can offer a lease renewal at any point in the lease term, however, he cannot force you to sign or raise your rent until the end of the contract.
No landlord should ever be kicking a tenant out himself. Go to court and get an order. Most states have a very accelerated process for evicting based on drugs and other crimes. In Massachusetts, where it normally takes at least seven weeks to have a tenant out, a landlord can evict based on drugs in four days. State and local laws should be checked out. And, different laws may apply in other countries.
Leap years occur every four years.
The four sphere of the earth are the Atmosphere (gaseous envelope), the hydrosphere (water), the lithosphere (crust, mantle), the biosphere (living organisms).
Yes, they can.
The Landlord has a duty to mitigate damages (in other words, to attempt to find a replacement tenant). However, if the Landlord is unable to find a replacement, the Landlord can bring a cause of action for breach of contract and is entitled to a full judgment of the remainder of the contract unless the vacated tenant can show frustration of purpose or some other appropriate remedy. The 30-day notice is irrelevant as to this scenario.
If you have a pet and have lived in an residence for four years, the landlord may be entitled to a pet deposit. Your residence is not permanent: you are a tenant, and your pet can cause damage, because it's an animal. One day, when you move out, the landlord needs to prepare the residence for a new tenant. Your landlord may be a little tardy in asking for a deposit. You may be able to negotiate the deposit if you bring your landlord into your residence and show that after four years, there is no pet damage. Your landlord may counter that your pet could damage the residence in the future, and the landlord would be correct. Finally, when you do move out, at least your landlord may want to remove trace evidence of a pet having lived in the residence, including dander, pet hair, aquarium damage, and so forth. Your pet deposit would cover this expense.
Yes--if 24 hour notice is all that is required by your state (unless you would like to be on the losing end of a lawsuit initiated by your unruly tenant). Keep in mind that you may only show the unit once a notice to vacate has been issued (at least in WA), so you might contact a landlord advocacy group in your area for details.
for four years,shyima had been living nightmare
Not in California. Probably not anywhere in the civilized world.
At four years old.
This scenario could occur under the doctrine of "once free, always free," where a slave who resides in a free territory for a certain period gains freedom. The individual could sue for freedom based on this legal principle and argue that their extended stay in the free territory entitles them to freedom. The outcome would depend on the specific laws and precedents in place at the time the case is heard.
Peter ES Nichols is the oldest living poet. He was an American who died at the age of ninety four years.
The world record for the longest living starfish is around 35 years.
Handel settled down in England after living in Italy for four years.
Landlord harassment, also known as tenant abuse, is the practice of a landlord abusing or exceeding his authority to intimidate his tenant, often to get his rent on time, increase the rent without notice, neglecting repairs, or otherwise infringing on tenant's rights. Many landlords get greedy or controlling over their tenants and use the threat of eviction or suddent rent increase to manipulate their tenants. Be especially wary of landlords who own fewer than four rental properties.