the hero has to die at the end
Your landlord , end of discussion.
Contact your old landlord and ask if they won't assist you in this matter. OR - if you have a copy of the letter or notice that you gave the old landlord it would certainly help. If you have already moved out, it sounds like he's trying to threaten you into paying. While it IS possible, it's kind of doubtful that he will spend the money to take you to court.
In most U.S. states, the nature end of the lease constitues notice, and a landlord can simply go to court and start a case the day after the lease ends. In fact, in Massachusetts, if the landlord has good reason to believe that the tenant is not planning to leave at the end of the lease (like if the tenant wrote them a letter saying so), the landlord can file an eviction case in the last 30 days of the lease.
Yes. If a landlord later determines that you damaged his property he can take you to court. A landlord is not required to assess damages under the deposit if they would prefer to return your deposit and sue you for more. The deposit laws are generally intended to avoid lawsuits from every landlord at the end of every tenancy.
cease
Bankruptcy has nothing to do with the tenants, and is not a reason for them to vacate. However, in any state except New Jersey, with a month-to-month tenancy, the landlord has the right to ask the tenant to leave at the end of the next rental period.
A common and curtious way to end a letter is Sincerely followed by your name. Since the intended reader seems to be a group of people or government officials this would be the best way to end the letter.
The author would put his phone number at the end of a letter as a form of contact. Authors may also put their email addresses at the end of a letter so other people can contact them.
If you had a contract with your landlord for yard cleanup then you have to keep to this contract until the end of the month when you move out. Marcy
After the word "enclosure" at the end of a business letter, you would typically include a colon or a comma.
Sincerly