No. That is not a breach by the landlord.
No.
No. You mother's illness is not your landlord's fault.
The foreclosure sale will function to terminate the lease. However, until the foreclosure sale takes place, the owner is still the owner, and the lease remains in effect.
I would be asking, in person, for a break, and would provide PROOF that your company is sending you out of the country. In that case the owner will be more likely to allow you to terminate early.
No. If your name is on the lease you are bound by the terms of the contract, unless one of you leaves for the military. Possibly you could ask the management for an amended lease--usually you can move within a complex, pay a fee, and continue, so maybe there would be latitude in that area. Certainly, though, you are bound to the lease and the other person has to be in agreement.
No.
If you paid your rent late, he didn't break the lease - you did. He can now move to terminate the lease.
a landlord may not EVER break/violate a lease. [unless the tenant wishes it so]
You can break a lease to move for work--but the landlord has the rights noted in the lease. Providing 30 days notice and talking to him about the reasons for your move may reduce the money they expect for you to pay to get out of the lease. If you have a letter of employment from the new job may help. A job in the military is usually the only work-related reason for getting out of a lease early.
He can't break the lease.
No. That's not the landlord's fault.
No. You mother's illness is not your landlord's fault.
The foreclosure sale will function to terminate the lease. However, until the foreclosure sale takes place, the owner is still the owner, and the lease remains in effect.
Most leases have provisions for the owner giving notice if the tenants need to move. Usually it is 30 to 60 days and is written. Of course, it is more convenient to just not renew the lease. It may be cheaper and easier for you to move into an apartment in the interim and let the lease run its course.
Nothing. The landlord need only give you the notice required by law (20 days in WA) and then simply move back in. The exception is if you have a lease--in that case, the landlord must honor the term of the lease unless the landlord and tenant mutually agree to break the lease. In that case, the tenant is free to demand compensation of the landlord for the landlord's breaking the lease.
I own a house that is leased until 1/31/10 and I want to move into it. Can I give the tenant a 60 day notice to move?
If you signed the lease, then no. No matter where you move no one can guarentee your safety. I would have toured the property before signing the paper work.