If I were a landlord I would go by apartment or home size, and not allow any dogs that exceed that size in pounds. I would also not allow any aggressive breeds.
Not if the dog didn't do any damage. A security deplosit is intended to be used for the repair of physical damage, and, in some states, for back rent. A landlord could evict for breach of the lease, but that's it.Not withstanding that the dwelling will have to be fumigated after your eviction, read your contract or have it read by a lawyer in your country. Not all contracts are the same. It could be that the local council bans dogs in HMOs.
Yes, a landlord can prohibit dogs even if other tenants have dogs. The 'other tenants have dogs' has no relevance in this case, it is a separate contract and is not discriminatory against dog owners.
Check your lease. This depends on the specific situation. Sometimes, leases change and certain things get "grandfathered" in; i.e., it may be that the tenant had a lease that allowed a dog when he/she moved in. It may also be a certain type of apartment/house that the landlord allows pets in. Basically, this all depends on your lease and the laws in your state. As far as I understand it, if you signed a lease that says you cannot have dogs, then you cannot have dogs.
It depends on your landlord and the conditions of your lease.
Yes, unless the owner/landlord prohibits them.
No. Dogs are very accepting animals, and will quickly accept their new owners as their new pack members. They may pine for their old owners if they have become very attached to them, but they soon put that behind them and accept the new owners as a part of them. Actually, it should be the other way around: the new owners should accept the dog as a part of their family, because in a pack, the humans should be the leaders and the dog[s] the followers.
yes
Here is more details to my question.... There was a verbal agreement between my landlord and I that dogs are allowed in our building. However my landlord now says no dogs are allowed after we have just signed the lease for our 2nd term. We were planning on getting a dog but now seem torn because we signed this lease with full intentions of getting a dog this month. On the lease there is nothing mentioning a dog being forbidden can the landlord do this? note that there are several dogs in my apartment building including 2 Boston terriers across the hall and a Labrador down the hall. (note the 2 Boston Terriers moved in a month after I signed my lease)
ABOVE GROUND POOLThe owner of the property must take reasonable steps protect the public, esp. small children. But even then if the child climbs a fence and drowns in the pool, the owner is still liable for the child's death. The landlord will have the final say, especially with his insurance. If his insurance forbids mean dogs, pools, or other items, they will not pay any claims for damages caused by forbidden items. If that doesn't help, go on line to the State of Oregon's Legislative Web site and check through they're Landlord/Tenant Laws. You can also call the State Attorney Generals Office. They can give an answer.Good Luck.
If by accept, you mean breed with then probably not until she is in heat. If you mean accept as in be buddies with then that depends on the dogs temperment, how she responds to other dogs and how the male responds. Always use caution when introducing two large dogs as they could fight and you and they could end up with serious injuries.
America's Court with Judge Ross - 2010 Fighting Like Cats and Dogs The Landlord Cometh 1-238 was released on: USA: 26 May 2011
Service and assistance animals (or service dogs in training) are not technically pets and owners do not have to pay pet fees. The landlord or apartment, however, can charge a security deposit and may still seek money from the tenant if there is any damage caused by the animal to the home.