It depends on the state. In California, a landlord has no obligation to rent under Section 8. If you are saying you are currently in a lease and you want to continue renting but under a Section 8 lease, it would again depend on the state.
Legally you cannot be denied a lease because of your sexual orientation, but it is possible that a very conservative landlord might come up with another reason to deny the lease. If you suspect that this is likely to happen, try to find a Realtor that will protect your rights.
Depends. If you mean someone wanted to move out and sublet and you refused to let them sublet and they move out anyway can you sue them? It depends on whether the lease allowed them to or not. Generally a lease would have to "PROHIBIT" this; if it just says the landlord won't "unreasonably" deny consent to a sublease, then the landlord has to be reasonable and if it isn't, may lose out. This may vary from state to state. The thing is, that landlords generally are protected in sublease situations because there the tenant is supposed to collect the rent and send it to the landlord, so the original tenant is still responsible. But if the landlord starts accepting rent from the SUB-tenant, then it's possible the landlord will have agreed to release the tenant. This too varies from state to state and based on facts.
Yes an employer can deny giving you overtime hours but if you have already worked overtime then it is not okay for an employer to deny paying overtime once the hours have already been earned.
Only if you are under the age of being able to sign a legally binding contract .
Each Housing Authority has the right to handle such failure of inspection according to what it sees best. If the failures are relatively minor, the landlord will be given time to fix it. If the landlord fails to fix it within a given amount of time, it is a severe failure, or it is a repeated failure, the housing authority has the right to fail the inspection and assist the tenant in locating another property. If the tenant has not occupied the failed property yet, the Housing Authority will deny the applicant the ability to move there.
Is Edison the Electric Company? If so then no, you can't be denied electric service simply because the landlord, or anyone else who lived there before you, owes the electric company money.
You can deny him access. He is evicting you anyway, so he has no lawful reason to enter your premises unless there is an emergency. What could he do if you deny him, evict you again?
In general, NO. However the landlord has a right to discriminate on any basis if the dwelling is a 2 or perhaps 3 family that is owner personally occupies one or more units.
It depends on what state you are in according to RentLaw.com
Read your governing documents to determine whether or not the association has the responsibility or authority to approve leases. If so, then the owner has the responsibility to present a lease for board review, and the board has a responsibility to review and either approve the lease as is, request changes to it, or deny the lease outright if the lease disagrees with the governing documents. If a lease is written in clear violation of the governing documents, then the association's board may be able to void the lease and require that the owner either evict the tenant or craft a new lease. For example, if the covenants preclude operation of a day care facility within the community, and an owner signs a lease with a day care operator who intends to operate a day care center in the community, then the board has the responsibility to void the lease.
If a tenant lied on the application, this is grounds for termination in any state. The landlord has no obligation to confirm the info.
Deny deny deny!