With regard to any situation regarding painting: it is standard practice for a landlord to paint a dwelling before occupancy by a new tenant. Many states require this, while many don't. In states that don't require this, like South Carolina or Florida, you simply do not sign a lease if the dwelling is not painted. Most reputable landlords will paint the dwelling before even showing it to prospective tenants.
No, a landlord cannot add fees mid-lease without prior notice or agreement.
No, a landlord cannot change the payment method for rent without providing prior notice to the tenant.
You can secure your mortgage by signing a prior agreement with the landlord in the presence of an advocate.
Not sure why this would be a landlord/tenant issue, since the landlord can sell to anyone he or she wants and the tenant simply continues paying rent, but to a different landlord. The only "notice" required would be when the new landlord wants the rent sent to a different place or wants to change the terms of the tenancy (usually with 30 days prior notice, unless otherwise specified in a lease).
prior to glassing,acyrlic paint using brush or airbrush works great.
Prior to the 2008 season, that was November 6, 2007 when Central Michigan defeated Western Michigan 34-31.
If you were required to pay a security deposit prior to moving in, overpayment would not apply to that unless you have a verbal or written agreement with the landlord. Typically, if you make an overpayment on rent, it would be applied to next month's balance.
a landlord may not EVER break/violate a lease. [unless the tenant wishes it so]
Yes, you can paint oil paint over sound water based paint easily, just be sure to degloss and clean the surface prior to painting.
She had no prior knowledge of the event. Prior to the new legislation, motorcycle riders were not required to wear helmets.
You might be asking if this is slander. It is slander, if someone says something about you, to another, and that statement is false, and causes you some loss. If what he tells the new landlord is true, there is likely no cause of action for slander.
Anyone who requests a credit report must get your prior permission. This includes a landlord. You must provide he information the landlord needs before they can legally get a credit report, but this is a requirement for a lot of landlords before they will rent you their property.