YES, as long as the house or apartment is left in the same condition as it was when you moved in.
No.
If you were to break a lease for legal reason then it is possible to get your deposit back in most cases. Some legal reasons can include infestations of vermin, noisy neighbors, or criminal activity.
Only a serious breach by the landlord - like substantial, ongoing code violations - would allow a tenant to break the lease.
Well, there is nothing to stop you from breaking the lease, however, the renter does not necessarily have to give you back the deposit (if there was a deposit required).
No. You mother's illness is not your landlord's fault.
No.
the layers deposit is because the acid rain break them apart
Yes, you can break a recurring deposit. The bank cannot refuse that. But, the bank has the right to retain/cancel the interest due on it because you are not letting the recurring deposit mature or finish its full tenure. You will get the money you deposited but not any interest.
You can, but you will probably not get back your security deposit.
because someone laced it with methamphetamines
mostly no because they will only get surprised
This depends on how your lease is written. You may (or may not) lose your deposit but if the landlord finds another renter you won't be responsible for the remaining months of rent you would have to pay until such renter is found.
because he liked someone else.
well its not your fault if you think someone else is hot. we cant help it. but if he wants to break up because you think someone else is hot then he id a bad boyfriend and you should break up with him.
It is perfectly normal idiomatic English to say that someone is on break, or on a break. A more formal phrasing would be, someone is taking a break.
Unless you have solid proof that you can show the landlord than it is really up to him/her if they want to return your deposit. If you have filed a police report then you may want to provide the landlord with a copy. You may want to go back and read your lease contract again. There may be a loop hole in the fine print that may or may not release your obligation.
yes because why stay with someone who love some one else and rather stay with someone who loves you.