It depends on your lease. If you don't have a lease, the rent can be raised at any time by any amount. If you do have a lease, check the lease. If their are limits raising the rent in the lease, then you can bring that to your landlord's attention. If they raise your rate more than what's in the lease, then you can sue them in order to get them to comply with the lease. If there are no limits identified in the lease, then the rent can be raised at any time by any amount.
No, your landlaord can not charge you more rent than is in your written statement or rental agreeement. The Landloard has to wait until your lease is up before they raise the rent, unless there is a clause in your agreement that says the rent can be raised before the lease is up.
If the tuxedo is for a fully grown adult male and he will have opportunities to wear it more than once it is wiser to buy. For children and one time use it is wiser to rent.
Yes, it is not unusual for robins to have two clutches a season.
He raised more than $600millon
It depends entirely on the region of choice. Rent in cities varied highly from city to city and was much more than rent in the countryside. Additionally, rent cost a lot more in developed countries than it did in developing countries.
This is more of a rent control question. Most states are not rent-controlled, but many jurisdictions within those states may be. If that is the case, then the rent cannot be any higher than the amount that is controlled by the jurisdiction. Otherwise, as is the case in most states, the rent can be as high as the landlord wants: it would be up to you, the tenant, to decide whether you want to pay the increased amount. If not, then you must vacate premises.
Sorry,but you cannot rent more than 3 cards.
Yes.
It can occur more than once.
The average rent of an apartment is more than $850.00 per month, what is the alternative hypothesis?
Rent control laws varies from state to state, with disregard for longevity.