No there no way to back out of the lease unless your life is in jeopardy or you are a victim of domestic violence or you landlord does not do maintenance to the property when section 8 is involved and they do give all landlords a certain amount of time to fix any damage due to the property if it is not done by the time limit then section 8 will then drop your lease.
You cannot be sued unless you signed the lease or signed something else promising to guarantee it in some way.
You may have to log on to the xbox website and get it back.. or if you're signed out on the xbox... go to the home section and all the way to the right should be a recovery page.
bayren munich signed him
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.
If you are interested in researching for condos for lease, there are many ways to do so. One could look in the classified section of their newspaper or one could go into their local real estate office or call them.
No. Once a cosigner has signed the contract the only way they can be removed from the responsibility is a new agreement being made without the assistance of the original cosigner.
no take him o court that is illegal all the way
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
This argument has been raised countless times by many defendants. It's the old "Well on my lease, my landlord signed it but I didn't", it just happens to be its antecedent. But think of that argument in this perspective:The landlord or his attorney wrote the lease.Chances are you've never met the landlord prior to having some sort of interest with them (the place you rented). So how would you have the defendants contract with your signature on it, in your possession?These facts can easily be obtained by asking the respective parties these questions. These questions give rise to the fact that a contract can be binding if both parties act in a way in which a reasonable and ordinarily prudent person would find that a contract existed.Even though the landlord may not have signed the lease agreement, you both acted in a way in which would suggest a landlord-tenant relationship exists. You're therefore bound by your lease.
You discover that the guy running PrintFax is also the one leasing the empty store space beneath Slugger's Keepsakes. Gus says the odd disturbances began around the time the lease was signed. Head to PrintFax to investigate (you won't get all the way there).
That totally depends upon the terms of the lease that was signed.
Your lease most likely has a provision against "subletting" your apartment. Any changes in renters must be approved by the landlord, and that includes adding or removing names off the lease. The landlord decides "who" rents from them ... not the tenant.