List the grounds under which you would sue Charlie. Based upon the lease agreement, we will sue Charlie for the following: • Non-payment of rent plus the remaining months’ rent • Damages to kitchen wall and window blinds • Big hole in the wall • Damages to the carpet • Renovation of dividing a part of bedroom into an office • Costs and attorney fees • Book publisher injuries and any possible lawsuit charges List the arguments you would use to persuade the Judge to rule in your favor. The arguments we will use to persuade the judge to rule in our favor are the tenant breached seven covenants on the lease agreement. he failed to follow the lease agreement as outlined, such as lessee has an outstanding balance of $3, 200 for two months back rent; lessee agrees that the leased apartment shall be occupied by no more than two adults; lessee agreed not assign this lease, or sublet the premises or any part of the premises without the prior, express, and written consent; it was agreed that lessee will not make or permit to be made any alterations, additions, improvements or changes in the leased apartment without obtaining the written consent; lessee shall keep no domestic or other animals …show more content…
Lessor failed to follow the lease agreement considering security deposit; lessor did not give lessee 24 hours’ notice of showing apartment for rental; lessor agree to repairs to the interior and exterior of the building; lessor did not give lessee 30 days written notice of any default or breach. Lessor shall have the right to enter the leased premises for inspection at all reasonable hours and whenever necessary to make repairs and alterations of the apartment or apartment building, or to clean the apartment. Lessor assured the repairs will be taken care of quickly, however, she failed to make any repairs. Lessee notified lessor of the defects in the
Specify reason/s of the breach of the lease agreement and evacuation in section 2, Notice. Provide a detailed description and you can enclose documentary evidence in support of the reasons furnished here.
We represent Thompson Laurie DiNoto, the Tenant, under that certain Residential Lease dated July 3, 2017. You are hereby notified that Mr. and Mrs. DiNoto rescinded the above-referenced Residential Lease under the terms of which they took occupancy of Lily Unit #127. This rescission is made on the ground that (1) the Premises are not in a tenantable condition; (2) the monthly rent charge of $7500 was substantially in excess of the advertised rate of $6,000 per month in violation of Business and Professions Code sections 17200 and 17500, as well as section 43(A) of The Lanham Act; (3) the Residential Lease is unlawful in that it omits required disclosures under federal and state law.
Section 1, titled terms lists the terms of the contract. The terms of the agreement must be definite and certain. All material terms must be included. The material terms allow a court to determine what the damages are in the event that one of the parties breach the terms of the contract. Section 1, of Exhibit D: Commercial Lease Agreement list the date the lease starts and the date the lease ends. It then lists the damages that the tenant may take if the landlord is not able to provide the leased premises in a timely manner. The section then goes on to state the terms of the renewal process. The process of renewing the lease is set with a written notice of 90 days. This process is definite and certain. The renewal provision then states that the terms shall be at the rental listed in the below sections of the agreement and upon the same covenants, conditions and provisions as contained in the lease agreement. Both the terms listed to lease the premises and to renew the contract is definite and certain and it lists the material terms.
2) The court has to evaluate all the evidence presented by both the plaintiff and the defendant at the trial. The court needed to establish that “an unreasonable use of the defendant’s property so as to cause substantial interference with the enjoyment or use of the plaintiff’s property has
(4th Amend. Compl. ¶¶ 17-19.) Further, according to Plaintiffs, the property’s water supply came from a well, which was not safe for drinking. (4th Amend. Compl. ¶¶ 20-22.) Also that month, Nenn allegedly informed Defendants that a “large hole on the side of the house near the bathroom . . . remained open and in disrepair,” which left the “insulation totally exposed to the elements,” certain windows were missing trim and weather sealing, and that “another large hole existed near Nenn’s bedroom that allowed the exterior elements to penetrate” the property. (4th Amend. Compl. ¶¶ 23-28.) Plaintiffs allege that Defendants failed to make the repairs within sixty days. (4th Amend. Compl. ¶¶ 26, 28,
The plaintiff, James Davis Rowland, Jr., was a guest in the apartment of the defendant, Nancy Christian. The plaintiff requested to use the bathroom, where he injured his hand on a broken water faucet handle. Although the defendant had complained to the landlord about the broken handle, she did not warn the plaintiff.
If the non-moving party fails to make a sufficient showing on an element for which it has the burden of proof, the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
The Court in the 6th Circuit was to determine if the plaintiff, David Dunlap, had met the burden of proof that his
Does this mean that even I’m no longer physically leaving at the unit from November 2 until November 5, DAC still going to issue the invoice for the pro-rata rental?
The defendant’s attorney argued that this was his first drug charge and stated that the defendant was indeed eligible under Virginia law to receive first offender status. The first offender program included a decision that the judge would withhold for one year. It also included that the defendant, was to serve 100 hours of community service, be subject to random drug tests, and was to wave his 4th Amendment rights of unreasonable searches and seizures for one year. The judge then asked to hear his prior criminal record. The attorney then representing the Commonwealth of Virginia began to list a long list of incidents, which included; Breaking and entering, and grand larceny in 2003, assault and battery in 2004, and a D.U.I. with a failure to appear in court in 2012. After hearing a longer list than stated above, the judge stated “I think I have heard enough. It seems to me that you are trying to obtain first offender status to avoid another conviction.” The defense began to argue that the defendant at the time he was stopped on his moped was heading to one of his three jobs. The judge stated, “I assume he was using the moped due to his D.U.I.” in which the answer was “yes”. The judge then asked the attorney for the Commonwealth of Virginia to present his argument, in which he surprisingly stated that overall in the defendants circumstances he was “trying to do the right thing” by having three jobs and working hard. The judge interjected and
Furthermore, the District Court was required to make a new review of the Magistrate Judge's ruling. Nonetheless, the District Court was not convinced by the objections of the defense to the Magistrate's report; granting the Prosecution's motion to admit DNA evidence, and denied the defendants motion to dismiss the evidence.
ACPS consultants provided the attachment on the lease versus purchase analysis on 1701 North Beauregard Street. The purchase analysis consists of the purchase price at $15,000,000. Additionally the analysis includes a build-out cost of $185.00/SF for 119,088/SF building. ACPS is developing an independent build-out cost budget with an architectural firm for construction cost estimates and design options.
I am Sam Mosadek, son or Rowshan Begum at 21-67 33rd Street #2A Astoria, NY 11105 (Docket No 415288) do not reside at that address since 1997. My name was incorrect as it shown in the former lease and I have never taken my father's first name as family name. Please correct record accordingly. Please file a copy of the utility bill enclosed. Should you require any other information please contact me via
Contract Law Case Study Both the parties in the question have come to a problematic situation
When I walked in, the defendant was seated on the stand, and he was telling the judge that he had filed for custody of his four children. As he was explaining why, Brad Macdonald, the ex-wife’s lawyer, objected. His reason for objecting was that the basis for filing was not relevant. I didn’t know that lawyers were free to interrupt people on the bench while they were presenting their case. The judge sustained the objection, and the defendant continued to plead his case.