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Re: Signed lease for new apt - old tenant won't leave
by Anonymous
on May 25, 2017 @07:38
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G.......you're mis informed and really should get some understanding of basic business,, the real estate business and the fundamentals of contracts and agreements,..........which in this application,......are generally called Leases or Rental Agreements.
An agreement can be written or oral. The subject of """the agreement""". Is the specific """living space""". Known and referred to as ""the premises"" Generally, when a tenant in place in a SPECIFIC premises stays in possession past the expiration date of a lease they either become a month to month tenant, known as a holdover or tenancy at will OR the occupancy rolls over into another fixed term as set out in the original written lease,......depending on BOTH the terms of the original lease and STATE LAWS When a different PREMISES enters the agreement,.....it becomes a new agreement .......a completely NEW deal.........from ground zero,........restart,.....day one.
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Re: Signed lease for new apt - old tenant won't leave
by Garry
on May 25, 2017 @09:03
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I'm not sure what you are trying to tell me. But I can tell you this------anyone coming to this forum, either LLs or Ts, are asking questions or giving answers, in common, everyday language. None of us are lawyers, and we don't speak in "legalese", or even "code" language that cities use concerning rental properties. Nor do we want answers given that way. Yes, many leases, including mine, are made up of mostly "legalese". But this is an OPINION based forum, and most everyone just wants people to "tell it like it is", using common, everyday language that a 15 year old child could understand. Those are the kinds of answers I give. If you want to "re-word" my answers, using "legalese", "codespeak" or more "formal" wording, please feel free to do so.
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Re: Signed lease for new apt - old tenant won't leave
by Anonymous
on May 25, 2017 @20:36
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" using common, everyday language that a 15 year old child could understand"
If they cannot understand the basic terms used in this industry unless it's in terms of a 15 year old, then maybe they should not be landlords. This is a business for professionals, not kids. Learn the lingo, lean the rules and laws and learn how to do it all as a business.
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