Yes.
It is unseemly that a landlord can charge a tenant for other than the items listed in the lease. You can pay them and take your landlord to landlord-tenant court for reimbursement, or you can approach a landlord-tenant advocacy to find the answer that you want.
yes
If you have a lease your landlord would have to take you to court to have you kicked out of the apartment. If you are a month to month tenant then the landlord can request that you vacate with 30 days notice.
If It States In The Lease That He Can. If It Isn`t Written That He Can, Take Him To Court,
Yes, and will be upheld in court. Unless items are in violation of the Landlord act of that state. If the lease is not "breaking" your states landlord act they are valid even if they sound absurd.
The answer is probably not, but you can have the landlord arrested, or at least file charges against the person. To break the lease, you will probably have to sue in court.
As a tenant, if the landlord wishes to break their own lease, you have the right to seek damages just as they would if you had broken your lease. The usual outcome for a landlord to break a lease is that the landlord forfeits any right to retain the security deposit.
You need to come into agreement with the current tenant as well as the landlord. If the landlord approves, you will sign an agreement to take over the lease from the current tenant.
no you can't. you just have to go to the landlord and let them know whata's going on and then if they don't do anything about it take pictures and take them to court.
Read your lease agreement.When I appear in court as an expert witness I check the lease agreement and proceed from there
Did you have a lease? We're you evicted by court order, or did you leave be ause your landlord told you to leave? Were you behind on rent, and if so, how behind? Katerina
yes