You would submit it at least 30 days before the lease expires.
When you enter into a Contract of Lease, you a signing a legal document between the lessor and lessee. Both parties have the right to terminate the lease at any time if the terms and conditions of the Contract of Lease have been broken. A Lease Termination letter is usually written when one party has violated the terms of this contract and the other party has decided to end it.
It'd be quite impressive if the apartment itself would give you notice...
Some leases automatically renew themselves if notice is not given within a certain amount of time before the end of the lease term.
Depends on the state and their marital status. In some states being married forms implied contracts and If a wife enters into a contract which would more likely than not effect the husband, the husband is included as a party to the contract.
Only the lease contract would disclose the anwer to this question. If you need legal assistance in deciphering or understanding it, you must retain an attorney to assist you.
A nominate contract is one that has a specific name attached to it. An example of a contract of this type would be an apartment lease or a loan agreement.
Only if the signed Lease states that written notice is required to renew. If it does not then you would need to take a look at your local landlord tenant laws / rights
I believe it varies from city to city, but most all would require some kind of notice, and proof that notice was given. Read your lease contract to know for sure. It's prossible you may have waved those rights when you signed, or agreed to different terms.
The unlawful entry is usually not grounds for breaking the lease, although, depending on what he did when he entered, a judge might see fit to vacate the lease. It would have to be pretty bad. But, in some U.S. states, the tenant could now sue the landlord for the breach of habitability, for as much as three months rent. A landlord faced with that might agree to break the lease.
In general, states limit the right of a plaintiff to enforce a contract for real property rights (including a lease), unless there is a document signed by the defendant. Your particular state may interpret a lease as a contract that could be enforced if the husband actually acted as if there were a lease, even if he didn't personally sign it, but there could be complicated issues of fact and evidence worth discussing with an attorney.
Prior to having the tenant sign, the landlord would insert the sentence into the lease, "The landlord reserves the right to terminate this lease with ninety days notice." Tenant may request the same terms, or take the tenancy as offered.
Generally, anyone under the age of 18 cannot enter a legal binding contract. A lease is such a contract. So no apartment complex would ever lease to a 17-year-old.