a month later
No
The age to rent a car without paying a premium should be lowered to 21.
start looking for a room mate and you pay half and they pay half it should work
The tenant should stop paying rent whenever the governmental agency to whom the taxes are owed threatens to foreclose or repossess the property. In that case, the tenant should demand (in writing) that the landlord pay the delinquent taxes. If the landlord refuses, the tenant should move (again, upon giving written notice to the landlord).
If you mean prior to moving in, No. In order to secure the apartment, you're paying first months rent plus security so there's no need to pay it again. Obviously you'll pay again at the end of the month or start of the first for the second month and so forth until you decide to move out.
Basically, you're paying for 8 months at $325 a month. Therefore, your total cost would be $2600 excluding utilities. $650 of which will be your deposit. The remaining $1950 is actual rent.
If you are still paying on the land you should charge atleast the amount you are still paying.
tell what you paying for like rent etc. tell what you paying for like rent etc. tell what you paying for like rent etc.
A tenant can be evicted for habitually paying their rent late. In Massachusetts, being late twice in twelve months is grounds for eviction.
If you are not paying rent - yes, absolutely the landlord can. If you aren't paying rent, your "refusal" has no legs to stand on.
That will depend on what the lien is for. In most cases, paying the rent does nothing to liquidate the debt. If the lein is for the rent, then yes, it should reduce the amount, as long as the current rent is being paid.
You could try, but the fact is, you owed him that rent up until the day the foreclosure sale happened. Whether or not he is paying the mortgage has nothing to do with your obligation to pay the rent. By federal law (and most states have even stronger laws) the bank should have given you plenty of time to move.