The best you can do is take him to court in the matter, but you HAVE to keep paying rent, or some portion of it. Contact a commercial lawyer asap. I've been in this situation before. As soon as we stopped paying rent, EVEN THOUGH they 'breached' the lease first, we were also in breach of the lease.
Because of this, we had to go to mediation instead of having a court grant us a full judgement of monies owed. Had we kept paying rent, we would have come out WAY on top instead of just a little on top.
Commercial Leases suck, but it's the cost of doing business!
No.
No
cancel figured it out
This depends on the terms of the lease. If there is no casualty clause, then state landlord-tenant laws will govern, which vary greatly from state to state. See an attorney if your lease does not contain the casualty clause.
Most lease contracts have a clause that reserves the landlord's right to cancel the agreement if certain conditions are met. If you believe your contract does not support that right, then the landlord may be violating the terms of the agreement. The only way to know for sure is to study the contract, or hire the services of a lawyer to help interpret the contract.
Yes, the landlord can. A landlord has the right to terminate the lease if the tenant made a false statement on his application for tenancy, including omission of material facts, such as being convicted of a felony.
Only if the landlord rents it to someone else.
Signing a lease is a binding contract. The landlord can choose to allow you out of it if they wish, but they are not legally required to do so.
Get StartedThe Agreement to Cancel Lease should be used when a Landlord and Tenant have mutually agreed to alter the ending date of the lease agreement from its original terms. This Agreement is only suitable for a voluntary termination of a lease term. Both the Landlord and the Tenant need to sign the Agreement for it to be legally effective. This Agreement is not designed for use if one party is looking to unilaterally end the rental relationship (for example, a landlord is trying to evict a tenant for non-payment of rent).There may be several reasons that the parties wish to alter the length of a lease. Often, a Landlord sells the property to another party who does not wish to have the property occupied by a Tenant. If the parties can agree to an earlier termination to the lease, this document can be used to identify an earlier termination date. Sometimes a Tenant may want to get out of a lease agreement (wants to move, needs a bigger apartment, etc.). If the Landlord is willing to let the Tenant break the lease, this Agreement may be used to clearly show when the lease will end.This Agreement can be used for both commercial and residential leases. It should be signed by both parties and if there are multiple Landlords or Tenants, all should join in signing. It is not necessary that the signatures be witnessed or notarized.
No, as long as you are not in default on the loan.
Through account settings, there should be an option to cancel existing subscriptions.
There should be a way for you to cancel a membership on the ASccount Section of the homepage.