If you have this clause in writing in your lease agreement and the landlord doesn't follow through then you have cause to break the agreement.
You can try.
Your landlord has the responsibility to provide you with habitable premises. If there is another usable sink in the house, it might not be required for the landlord to install a sink downstairs. Also, it is required if the landlord promised or implied that there would be a sink in that bathroom.
Compensation should be made for the problem, but if the lease is signed, it is in force. Check with your state for the possible remedies you have for failure to have a habitable place.
The lease normally names all the people who will be living there. Then, if anyone else moves in, the landlord has the right to say you are in violation of the lease and he can evict you if those other people don't leave. With that in mind, what your landlord is doing is altering his side of the deal after you altered your side of it. If you don't like the higher rent, move your family out and tell the landlord you are now only going to pay the amount you promised in the lease.
he promised to be a good person in everyway possible .
The promised land is North America. since their weren't cameras a thousand years ago, it not really possible, but their maypaintings of how artists portray it.
Of course, they can! It is their property. The funds go into escrow to be used for that purpose only. Make sure you complete a walk through list when you first move in. When you move out, take your copy of the list and walk through the apartment with them. Many of them charge for loose electrical outlets, dings on doors and other ridiculous charges if you do not attend the the walkthough at the end. Make sure you keep up with the maintenance of the place and document your requests.
The Puritans and they were led by John Winthrop
The landlord can demand rent when it is due. Depending on the jurisdiction, they may not be able to take legal action until after 3 days but it is due when the lease says it is due. If Section 8 has not promised to pay on the due date you have in mind, it's the tenant's responsibility.
He promised his wife if there were any ways possible to communicate with her from the dead, he would.
Okay, we need to compartmentallize here: 1. The house is being foreclosed 2. There are things that need to be fixed here and the landlord promised to fix them Issue number 1 is between the landlord and his lender, not the tenant. So as long as the landlord has control of the property, he still can collect rent from the tenant and evict the tenant for non-payment of the rent or for other violations of the terms of the lease. Issue number 2 is between the tenant and the landlord. If the tenant needs repairs to the home that is vital to living in the home, such as water heater problems, then the tenant has the option of having the item(s) repaired and the rent offset by those expenses, or terminating the lease by moving out if the situation is inconducive to living in the unit. If the tenant chooses to repair the items then he must give the landlord a notice of at least seven days before the next rent is due that he will do such repairs and offset the rent accordingly. The tenant must then turn in receipts to the landlord in the amount of expenses, and pay the remaining amount of rent. The repair must not be frivolous, and of reasonable costs. The tenant may not charge for his own labor.
God promised the promised land to the Israelites.