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If you are a tenant, your agreement with the landlord should be through a written lease. Any verbal agreement or modification of the lease is non-binding. Check the terms of your written lease. If the landlord is violating this, you can insist that it be remedied or that you be permitted to move out.
Yes.
A breach of verbal agreement is when for example: You make a spoken agree with a landlord to clean your house when you move out. You move out and leave it all dirty. You have breached a verbal agreement. Its kind of like breaking a promaise!
A "verbal" agreement isn't worth much. If you don't have a written agreement you can't prove there was any agreement at all. I would contact the business and see if they will document your verbal agreement.
only if that is agreeable with landlord. A lease agreement without a lease is a verbal lease. Your last month's rent is not a security deposit.
Not in Massachusetts. You should check your state's laws, but most states say no.
Most states allow verbal rental agreements. But when the landlord chooses to execute this he must be aware that anything that he wants to enforce about your tenancy there he must have in writing and signed.
no the person should not be able to be a part of that business because they did not do what they were expected to do in stateing they veiw in the agreement
This can happen, and is perfectly legal, in part because a verbal agreement is nonbinding. However, you then have the right not to sign the lease and to cancel the entire matter if you find that the rent is not reasonable.
yes they can but make sure to ask the landlord first so you get no surprizes it also depends on how long that person has stayed over
Can a Landlord turn off power before evicting a tenant? Absolutely NOT!! And any verbal agreement cannot contain unconscionable statements such as that the tenant would agree to allow Landlord to turn off utilities for non-payment of rent, even if the utilities are in the Landlord's name and you pay separately for that. If you're asking if a Renter can turn off his power, sure! At any time if the power is in the Renter's name (the Renter means the Tenant, not the Landlord).
No it doesn't.