Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the lease you signed - it should address this.
Have you seen an apartment lease recently? No this is often not covered. Furthermore they're often written in a way a average person can't dicern without year one of law school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the lease you signed - it should address this.
Have you seen an apartment lease recently? No this is often not covered. Furthermore they're often written in a way a average person can't dicern without year one of law school.
Every lease I ever signed in the DMV addressed this. It's the most basic of terms. OP's inability to read what she signed isn't something to blame the landlord on. However, we are all just speculating without knowing what the terms of her lease are.
OP. if you don't want to move, why would you not sign a new lease?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the lease you signed - it should address this.
Maybe, but state law and local law override lease terms. If you're concerned talk to a tenant advocate or a lawyer. Sometimes unenforceable terms are inserted into leases by landlords, even corporate landlords
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the lease you signed - it should address this.
Have you seen an apartment lease recently? No this is often not covered. Furthermore they're often written in a way a average person can't dicern without year one of law school.
Anonymous wrote:Read the lease you signed - it should address this.
Anonymous wrote:Read the lease you signed - it should address this.