If you mean a car lease, no.
If you mean an apartment or house lease ... probably not, but you'd need to check the terms of your specific lease to see what it says. Also, you could at least try asking your landlord ... they may be willing to let you out of the lease early. Landlords in places where demand is pretty much constant are more likely to let you out of a lease than landlords in places where demand is highly cyclical (college towns, some vacation spots). Unless you just happen to be getting married during the high demand period when the landlord thinks they'll have no trouble re-renting the place.
Finally, most lease contracts are for a specific period of time, but after that it's fairly common for them to go on a month-to-month basis, meaning that after you've been there for a year you may not be required to give the landlord more than 30 days notice. Again, it depends on the specific terms of your lease.
An eviction definitely! With a broken lease, you are still paying your landlord the rent that you own him and will probably be paying a fee to break the lease. With an evicition, the renter probably has stopped paying the rent or has damaged the property or has been doing something illegal like growing marijuana on the property.
If the rent is not paid, you need to serve a notice to quit. It doesn't really matter whether you have the lease.
Not unless you can prove that there is A pattern of break ins that existed before you moved in, and you had no knowledge of it.
Yes you have to follow the terms of the lease. You are however entiltled to a copy of it, and I owuld ask for it. Some leases will include a clause that gives the renter the option to break the lease early if 30 written notice is given. Some rental companies will also allow a lease to be broken if they are given enough notice to rerent the place before the current residents vacate. I would get a copy of the lease and see how it reads and if any of these options are available to you!
They can TERMINATE a lease, if the lessee is in violation of the lease.
The Broken Lease - 1912 was released on: USA: 24 February 1912
No.
In your case, a verb.
The cast of The Broken Lease - 1912 includes: Grace Lewis as Mrs. William Gleason Hayward Mack as The Landlord
It depends on the text of the lease, but probably not. You're probably stuck with the same lease buy out provisions as you would under any other circumstances. Read your lease.
What are the terms of the lease? Does the lease indicate anything about delivery date? Were they required under the lease to deliver by a certain day? If so, and the day has passed, perhaps they have broken the lease.
No. That's not the landlord's fault.
None. A lease for a fixed term runs until it is over. Being a student has nothing to do with it.
There are 3 major ways to get out of a lease agreeement. 1. Ask the Landlord or Lessor to be let out of the lease agreement. 2. Find a clause that the Lessor has broken to you can terminate the lease agreement. 3. Find a Sublessor to take over the rental payments in your lease agreement.
An eviction definitely! With a broken lease, you are still paying your landlord the rent that you own him and will probably be paying a fee to break the lease. With an evicition, the renter probably has stopped paying the rent or has damaged the property or has been doing something illegal like growing marijuana on the property.
Then he or she has broken the law. Contact the police or an attorney. A lease is a legal contract and someone other than you signing your name is committing a crime.
No. A minor cannot be party to a contract.