Depends on the Written Agreement itself, does the Agreement so state the claims of your argument in terms of your Recourse, or Theirs? How can one make a Agreement, if both parties don't agree to the terms, and still call it a Agreement? Likewise it depends on the State Statutes in your State where you and the tenant made the Agreement, does it conflict with State or local laws? I would like to know which one of the two you Represent, The Tenant, or the Landlord?
i am the tenant me and the landlord had a sign state agency rental agreemnet
at the last minute chane her mind leaving me and two children facing homeless
i am also about to loose my housing voucher which will expire 11/30/09
No
Most lease contracts have a clause that reserves the landlord's right to cancel the agreement if certain conditions are met. If you believe your contract does not support that right, then the landlord may be violating the terms of the agreement. The only way to know for sure is to study the contract, or hire the services of a lawyer to help interpret the contract.
If a damage deposit is/was a term of your Residential Tenancy Agreement, then yes. If there was no provision for a damage deposit when you signed the agreement, then the terms cannot be changed until the agreement expires, or both parties agree to the change in writing.
No. Signed is signed.
No.
you will have to read your contract agreement that you signed for the tenant/landlord relationship.
As you know a signed lease is a contract between you and the landlord and unless you are lucky enough to have an understanding landlord and you have a very, very good reason to break this contract then you are responsible for the agreement in that contract. Usually people have to pay the first and last months rent and possibly a damage deposit and you may lose that. You have tied up the landlord from renting to someone else, so it would be to your best interest to offer to let him/her keep the first months rent. Talk to the new landlord and hopefully your reasons for not moving in are valid and you just haven't found a better place to move too. You may just get lucky.
No, just signed by the Landlord and Tenant.
No, just signed by the Landlord and Tenant.
A rental agreement is an agreement signed by the landlord and tenant. The agreement must state the monthly rent, when it must be paid, any security deposit, the duration of the agreement and any restrictions or rules the landlord wishes to enforce as well as any rights that will accrue to the tenant. It should clearly state any deposit the tenant has already paid and what it is for (rent/security deposit). Rental agreements should contain any rights and obligations agreed upon by the parties.Although an agreement to rent a premises can be oral it should be in writing to protect the rights and set forth the responsibilities of the parties.
If you signed a lease agreement.He can hold you responsible for the remainder of the lease.Unless you cancel the lease before you transfer.
Yes, if it has been signed by the Landlord and Tenant.