The three day notice is also called "Fix or Quit". Which means in 72 hours you need to fix the breach, or quit the lease. If you pay the rent and the landlord accepts it, your leasehold continues. If you attempt to pay the rent and the landlord refuses it, keep a record of the date, time, and place (you may even wish to bring a witness with you).
Refusing the rent, shows the landlord did not follow through properly on the 3 day notice to fix or quit. You chose the option to fix the breach but the landlord rejected it. While this may not fix the eviction, it will look better for you in housing court.
As long as the landlord is in legal possession/ownership of the property and as long as you are residing on/in his property, yes. His notice of default has no legal effect of putting a "stay" on your payment of rent.
No, a landlord cannot change the payment method for rent without providing prior notice to the tenant.
In most states your landlord cannot raise the rent without at least 30 days of notice in writing. If a landlord essentially tells you by voice that he is raising the rent, or gives you too short notice, you can ignore the increase. If he files eviction proceedings you can bring up this matter as a defense in court.
If your landlord is selling the house you have to continue paying the rent for it, whether to the old landlord or to the new one. Your old landlord will give you notice about when they have sold the property, and the new landlord will give you instructions on how to pay them the rent.
Yes. If the rent is on a written lease then the lease must expire, and the landlord must give at least 30-days notice before the lease expires. If the rent is on a month-to-month basis, then the landlord must give a 30-day notice before the next rent is due. If the rent is on a weekly basis then the notice must be given at least one week before the rent is due.
As long as you're in the apartment your rent is still due. If the landlord is evicting you for any other reason except non-payment of rent you still must pay while the case is still pending. If it's for non-payment your court's clerk's office should tell you if you should pay the landlord or the Clerk's Registry.
If the rent is due every week, then the landlord usually must give a week's notice before the next rent is due; if it's every month, then a month's notice is given before the next rent is due.
Wisconsin does not have any laws specifying how much notice a landlord must give you in order to raise your rent. Your original lease should specify how much advance notice will be given. On a month to month lease, the landlord is required to give a minimum of 28 days notice, the same as beginning eviction proceedings. If your current lease is still valid, the landlord cannot legally change the rent until the lease ends.
no Answer #2. During a lease, the landlord cannot increase the rent. You are in a contract. Otherwise, speaking generally, the landlord has freedom to increase the rent. He typically owes you 30 days' notice. If you are not renewing, surely you will be out before any rent increase could take effect.
This depends on what you mean by eviction notice. There are generally two types: the initial notice of 3 to 5 days by the landlord, or a summons for eviction. In the case of the former, this is not really considered eviction notice, but rather a notice to pay your rent or to move. This type of notice consists of: your name, the landlord's name, the number of days you have to pay or to move out, or otherwise face eviction proceedings; the actual date by which the rent must be paid - which is between 3 to 5 days, depending on your state, including holidays and weekends; the landlord's signature, and the address of the rental property.
If the rent was not paid the landlord can file eviction proceedings against the tenant.
A landlord can give notice to vacate a rental property when the tenant violates the lease agreement, fails to pay rent, or when the lease term ends.