i think it is considered abandoned if it is not in your lease it shouldn't be there, therefore you are not responsible.
The renter is responsible for health and safety in a rented office as far as the renter's activities and equipment impinge on health and safety of occupants and neighbors. The landlord is responsible for health and safety as far as the physical arrangements of the rented space may impact health and safety of the occupants.
Typically, you are not responsible for the maintenance of a rented house. The responsibility for this falls on your landlord. However, read the rental agreement to be sure what you are/are not responsible for.
As I understand it, the landlord is required to maintain it essentially in the condition it was in when you moved in. So if there were working appliances when you rented it, they are responsible for the maintenance. If you are asking is the landlord required to provide new stuff when you move in, no.
In Short NO. The landlord is not responsible for upgrades to any property unless it is in writing in a formal lease. Homes are rented "as is" unless stated in a written lease.
Visit the apartment or contact the landlord.
landlord
Yes, unless the owner/landlord prohibits them.
Look at the lease agreement. Whoever is listed as the landlord, that is who should return the security deposit.
In most states if you break your lease you are responsible for the rent for each month the unit is vacant, up until it is rented out or until the leases expired, whichever comes first. Furthermore your landlord will be allowed to keep your security deposit.
Yes. The landlord cannot act until they have a court judgment against the tenant.
This depends upon whether that fee is quoted on your lease when you signed it. It is not there, then landlord cannot charge you because he rented the apartment quickly after you left. However he may be able to keep your security deposit if you broke your lease. If there was a lease, the terms are generally such that you are responsible for the rent for any month that the apartment is vacant from the time you vacate the apartment to the time the lease ends OR the apartment is rented out, whichever comes first. Since the landlord did not suffer any damage by breaking the lease - he rented out the unit just a few days that you left - there shouldn't really be any reason for him to charge a fee. But if that is stated on your lease then he has the right to do so.
The landlord, or the owner of the building in witch you rented in! Hope I helped! -Gabby