My roommate will not agree for me to break the lease. She has insulted me doesn't pay bills on time and is emotionally draining on me. I want to break the lease but she will not let me break it what can i do?
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.
None. Once the lease is signed, it is binding.
Not without the penalty stated in the contract. The lease can't be broken because of personal problems. It is possible that a cool landlord would just let you out of the lease if you talk to him about it, but they don't have to bend over backward if they don't want to.
Sorry, the question is totally unclear. Do you want to buy a foreclosed property that had been lease optioned -OR- is it your lease-optioned property that is in foreclosure? Are you the property owner or are you the person trying to buy it via lease-option? Please re-word the question and re-submit it.
You really should do your homework yourself. What would your teacher think about cheating like this? And, nobody writes leases like that.
May depend on what state you reside in. Here, in Wisconsin, if I receive a letter from one tenant, I would send the remaking tenant a letter stating they are now responsible for all rent. I would also have the remaining tenant sign a new lease. Hope this is helpful.
You go to the enterprise or whatever company you want to lease it from, show them your drivers license, sign papers and get the car.
No, purchasing a home is not sufficient reason to break your lease for a rented dwelling. However, you may want to talk to your landlord and see if he/she will release you from the remainder of your lease. Sometimes this involves paying all or a portion of the rent due from the remaining terms of the lease.
First of all, you and the other person on the lease must agree that the roommate should be evicted. Then, you should sit down with the roommate and try to work out a plan for the roommate to leave. Any agreement you can work out will be far easier and cheaper than using the legal process (see below).Next, if the roommate has agreed to pay rent, buy groceries, etc. (which means he/she is not a guest) you must give the roommate written notice to leave. 20 days' notice is what most states require, but you should check out your state's law. If the roommate still refuses to leave, then you must evict him/her in the same way a landlord evicts a tenant. See How Do You Evict a Tenant? below.If the roommate is a guest, then you will need to file a lawsuit for ejection against the roommate. Unless you are an expert at your state's civil court procedure, you will need to hire an attorney to represent you in the lawsuit.
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.
You can sign a lease before someone else is expired but the lease will have to specify that the start of the renting period is after the other persons lease expired. So if the prior lease says it ends the 1st then the new lease must be dated to start after that. This is not that unusual. Most landlords want to fill the unit as quickly as possible and it can take sometime to go through the process so the will often started as soon as they can. I've done this before. Generally speaking once I get my tenant screening results back, I want to get them locked in as soon as possible.
This depends: if you can demonstrate that there is a history of criminal activities, and one of which you are a victim of that type of criminal activity, then you might be able to break the lease. Keep in mind that any time you break a lease your landlord could keep the deposit. But if you break the lease for constructive reasons, such as the fact that your landlord is not doing enough to keep the property secure, safe, and decent, then you can sue the landlord for your deposit back and probably win. However, if you want to break a lease simply because you are victim of a crime that occurred on the property, that reason alone will probably not be a legal excuse.
i would fine a way to see if he is braking the lease in any way and than take that to a judge and have him sign you out of your lease but you have to have proof the your landlord is braking hin lease with you
You can create a lease for as long or as little as you want; it is only valid if both parties agree and then sign it.
It can go either way, depending on what the landlord wants. If they want you to sign another lease, they can require you to do so if you wish to continue living there. In absence of another lease, you are considered to be on "month to month" under the same terms as the original lease.
In order for the lease to be binding on a lessee, every lessee must sign. If the terms of the leases are the same, you can ask all three tenants to sign the same lease. If the terms and durations are different, a separate lease is recommended for each tenant. It is also recommended that you review your governing documents to determine whether or not it is legal for you to rent to three separate tenants.
Uh oh. Something smells fishy. If your boyfriend is telling you that he doesn't want you to have their address because his roommate doesn't want you to have it, chances are he's lying. What roommate would care? But if his roommate is telling you that he doesn't want you to have it, then why not? What's he got to hide? Whatever it is, it's probably something you don't want to have anything to do with. If it were me, I'd start looking for someone that isn't afraid to have me come to his house!