Yes if you are in a 12 month lease you are responsible for the rent for the remainder of the lease and any damages occurred as well.
Not sure what that answer has to do with the question, but here's another:
Yes, if you mean "after 7 months" of having left the premises with the damage done to it. Each state has a statute of limitations for civil actions for damages and it often runs 4 to 6 years, and sometimes 20 years for real estate cases.
no. not as long as you live in the us.
When moving in or out of a rental property, you can ask for prorated rent by calculating the daily rate and paying only for the days you will be living there. You can discuss this with your landlord and come to an agreement on the adjusted rent amount.
A landlord cannot legally harass you for rent if your rent is not in arrears.
I believe it is solely the landlord's responsibility to pay management fees. The landlord charges rent. All fees come out of the rent. Some areas of California have rent control, others do not.
If your friends landlord lowered the rent for him/her and then after moving in with him/her, he/she decides to move out, then the landlord will most likely raise the rent again.
Your landlord can evict you and sue for back rent.
Of course. You are still living there and your landlord's finances do not impact yours. He is still entitled to rent or can simply evict you.
I have to pay rent to my Landlord
The landlord's tacit hypothec -- It is an action that gives the landlord security for rent money that has not been paid. If the tenant has not paid the rent ,his goods are sold to cover the unpaid rent. When the goods are attached, it means an officer of the court will come and take the goods away as a form of security for outstanding rent and while the goods are on the leased property the landlord may interdict the tenant from removing them.
Yes.
Your answer depends on what you want to do.If the rent is paid for the full term of the lease agreement, then the landlord cannot rent the unit until the rent runs out.The landlord may want access to the unit to confirm that everything in the unit remains undamaged.If the landlord wants to rent the unit just because it's vacant, the landlord should refund the 'unused' rent to the departed tenant.
no