If the lease/rental agreement you signed continued into the month of November, then yes you have to pay the charges. TIMING and rental agreement is the key here. Let's suppose that my landlord sends me a termination letter in May to take effect 60 days from the receipt of the letter, then that means that I have up until June 30th to vacate the premises. You will not have to pay the rent for the remainder of the lease because by sending you a termination letter, he is terminating the rental agreement. Keep in mind that laws vary from state to state, so I would check with the local authorities. I am pretty sure that you can log onto your county's website and search under the tenant rights section. Make sure you read through your original rental agreement, there you might find a clause that specifies the circumstances under which the tenent or landlord may terminate such agreement. good luck,
Landlords can be very greedy and one-sided so you must protect yourself. you did not specify how much notice he gave you, but usually tenants get 30 days notice to vacate. Once you get this you are free to leave and not pay any rent beyond the 30 days.
(assuming he had the right to terminate)
BUT, if you remained in the premises you must pay.
Usually the landlord, but there's no law about it.
You can usually tell by the upkeep of the apartment building. As far as your landlord's character try talking to some of the other tenants.
It depends on what it is. If it's something that makes the apartment unlivable, the landlord is responsible to make the repair. If you're looking for something that is considered cosmetic, then you can get permission from the landlord to do it yourself. Try to negotiate with him to pay part of the cost.
Yes. It's not always the landlord that owns the apartment block, but a company and he has to go by the rules. The company has a right to a degree to decide who to rent too and refuse cosigners.
Water, sewer, and garbage are paid by the landlord.
if a landlord bugs my apartment, is that an invasion of privacy?
The landlord
Visit the apartment or contact the landlord.
Usually the landlord, but there's no law about it.
This all depends on the terms of your lease. Most apartment complexes do not allow a tenant to sublet. So if the main tenant terminates the tendency, this termination will include everyone. The main tenant is the one who will be responsible to give the landlord back into the apartment.
If you have a lease your landlord would have to take you to court to have you kicked out of the apartment. If you are a month to month tenant then the landlord can request that you vacate with 30 days notice.
If a tenant lied on the application, this is grounds for termination in any state. The landlord has no obligation to confirm the info.
You can usually tell by the upkeep of the apartment building. As far as your landlord's character try talking to some of the other tenants.
Follow the landlord's proper procedures for requesting such transfer. There may be a waiting list for that apartment.
Protect your rights as a landlord or renter: use a rental or lease agreement to outline renter and landlord responsibilities for apartment maintenance.Click here to fill out the Apartment Maintenance Responsibilitiesform
What a landlord verifies is completely up to the landlord
That depends on the landlord.