I believe the FCC prohibits interfering with the use of Satellite Dishes but you, as a tenant, are proposing to trespass on property not owned by you or even rented by you. You only rented the inside of your apartment with rights in common areas to go in and go out. Yes, the landlord can sue because if you put that dish up you are trespassing on his property.
that the Landlord will follow the law. if the tenant leaves the house in good condition, the landlord must refund the entire amount of security deposit.
The landlord can correct the problems for which the house can be potentially condemned. But the landlord cannot evict the tenant just for saying that.
Surely it is the responsibility of the landlord unless: - the tenant introduced the termites to the house, or - this responsibility has been specifically assigned to the tenant in a written lease
Yes, unless the tenant caused the fire, and the landlord can prove it.
Tenant or renter if there is no lease. Lessee if there is a lease.
32 minutes. if not then, run!
Sure, if the tenant caused it.
If tenant 1 has assaulted in anyway tenant 2 then the police will be able to do something about it.
In "Ballad of the Landlord" by Langston Hughes, some symbols include the "broken windows" representing the deteriorating living conditions for the tenant, the "leak in the roof" symbolizing neglect by the landlord, and the "slops" symbolizing the tenant's poverty and struggle with basic necessities. These symbols highlight the themes of social injustice and unequal power dynamics between landlords and tenants.
As long as the notice is sufficient, and there is no unexpired lease, the landlord can ask a tenant to leave for no reason at all.
There are multiple ways to hid satellite dishes on a house so that it is not easily seen by your neighbors. You can paint it, use a smaller dish, put the dish in the back of your house, or camouflage the dish.
Once a lease is mutually agreed upon (signed by both sides) it generally must be honored. But if the landlord asked the potential new tenant if he has a criminal record, that tenant denies such, and it is found out later that he has one, yes: the landlord can terminate the lease for fraud.