It depends on your lease agreement.
Yes he can. A violation of the terms of a lease by a landlord is just as much grounds for termination by the tenant. The landlord can still evict you but less likely will win.
If the lease is month to month, the landlord just has to give you a month notice and you are gone. If there is a lease that is still in effect, the landlord is responsible for costs that you incurred as a result of the breach of the lease.
If you signed a lease agreement.He can hold you responsible for the remainder of the lease.Unless you cancel the lease before you transfer.
In Short NO. The landlord is not responsible for upgrades to any property unless it is in writing in a formal lease. Homes are rented "as is" unless stated in a written lease.
Commonly, tenants will be responsible for the operation and repairs associated with the appliances used during the lease period.
i think it is considered abandoned if it is not in your lease it shouldn't be there, therefore you are not responsible.
You need to check your lease. If you're landlord is responsible for cutting the grass and other landscaping maitanence than yes you can sue the landlord. But if you are responsible for cutting the grass and plowing the drive than no.
yes, unless there is a codicil in your lease. better read it.
The answer should be in your lease. Can't find it there? Ask a lawyer to help. With a mutual agreement, the lease can be amended.
You would need to read you lease but in most cases the Landlord is responsible for the maintainance of air conditioning units
When you sign a lease with multiple tenants on the lease, you are all equally responsible for any aspect of your rent. Therefore if your roommate does not pay his portion of the rent, and you are responsible for the portion he doesn't pay. If this happens then you can be able to evict your roommate or have the landlord do so. Some landlords allow you to be the main tenant on the lease and in essence be the landlord for your roommates. This is called subletting. Most apartment complexes do not allow this. But for the landlords that do allow it, it allows you to control your situation better: your roommates can pay you and then you give one check to your landlord. If your roommate doesn't pay you, you can evict him. A lease is an agreement between all of you who are in the lease and your landlord. Therefore you are all equally responsible for what happens.