Perhaps, that issue would be decided by the wording of the rental or leasing contract. In most states landlords reserve the right to bar individuals from property, in some instances "just cause" is needed. Such reasoning would be determined by the court, but generally the law presumes the renter or leasee has the option to move or visit the person at some other location.
No, a landlord cannot prevent you from having guests, per se. But he has the right to limit how long that guests or guests can stay overnight.
yes
Yes, the landlord does have right. But he does not have the right to go into your mailbox. The sole purpose of your landlord having a mailbox key so that he can provide you with another one should you lose yours.
The landlord does not have to do any rewiring for you. The landlord has the obligation to make the place basically habitable. That's all. If the severe problems affect the usability of the house, like having no lights, getting shocks, or the heaters not working, you can force the landlord to deal with it. Much simpler, though, is to move. Having livability issues with the house may be grounds to break the lease in your state.
Yes. This can be considered a violation of the terms of your lease.
Not usually.
Peoplefinder.com
Having a crush, is having a like with for someone without the person knowing it. The person may be a friend.
You have to buy/sell an amount of 24,000 bells,I am not sure how but I did get it without connecting.
Steal it or get it from a friend
In most states, the landlord is forbidden from having the tenant pay for lights in the common area. The landlord should have a separate meter for those lights.
No, a landlord cannot prevent you from having guests, per se. But he has the right to limit how long that guests or guests can stay overnight.
yes
Generally, not having a certificate of occupancy is of no concern to the tenant and has no bearing on whether the tenant should pay rent.
Having
No I have a friend without a dad who is boy crazy. And I have a friend with both who is to. It really depends on the person
Yes, LandLords can collect rent without a certificate of occupancy.It depends on the state but in NY the answer is NO and the tenant may be entitled to as much as double the rent paid so far. And yes I am a lawyer and have seen cases where no C of O resulted in the landlord having to settle for a large sum