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My landlord didn't want me in this apartment in the beginning because I'd be the only female living with 3 guys. I know he didn't want me in this apartment for safety issue's but, did he have to give me a year lease! I don't think it's fair that I have this year lease. I signed it, not knowing my roommates all had 9 month lease. I'm a student, and I'm not going to be living here for the summer, which puts me in a financial situation. Should I bring this up to my landlord? What do I do? :S

2007-01-03 15:15:28 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

Well, we each pay 300 for our bedroom or "Unit" as my land lord calls it.

Its just a 4 bedroom apartment, we each pay 300 for rent, we all signed our own leases.

We all chip in on the power and water.

I didn't know my roommates before I signed it, It was summer and I was heading to hawaii so on my way to the airport I signed the lease with my mom and dad. I moved in on september 1st met my roommates only now I found out their lease isnt as long as mine.

2007-01-03 18:42:54 · update #1

7 answers

of course that isn't fair but you did sign the lease so it is binding.... now, let me ask you, you only pay 1/4 of the rent, right? therefore it isn't much. or will you be responsible for the whole rental of the place when your other three roommates leave.

first, go talk to your landlord (in a polite way) and ask him about it. just don't let your false pride get in the way of logical thinking and confront him about the contract and attack him in any way. when you talk to him use your academy award traits and let him know you are worried about this BUT DO NOT MAKE HIM THINK YOU BLAME HIM. use the "poor little me i am helpless" scenario. the "i'm a student trying to do my very best" kind of thing and "please advice me what to do, mr. landlord" thing. most people are good people and he will probably try to see what options are available. but please, again, do not turn him against you because in this situation, he is on the right and you lose big time!

anyway, my husband used to be a property manager. he said legally you are bound by the contract BUT if you are not rude to the property manager and try to help him find someone to lease the apartment before your lease is up, he may not hold you liable. my husband used to do this as he was in situations like this and he tried to help out. just try to be pleasant from now on.

you don't want to ruin your credit as you may need your credit for future rentals. make friends with him, be pleasant and polite and remember he may not be such a bad guy after all....

2007-01-03 16:44:49 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

This makes no sense. Usually there is one lease with all parties to the lease signing one lease. Read your lease very carfully. I know when I say this, people usually skim it for 2 seconds and then start speculating. So I say it again, read every word.
Without any information to the contrary you are responsible for anything you signed. Your have learned a good lesson, make sure you understand what you sign, and DO NOT take verbal representations over the written contract.
Does your lease list the total rent or just your share? If it is just your share than at least you are only due that amount. If it is the total, and the landlord is only asking for your share, make sure you send him your share directly. This may create a defense for you that by him accepting an amount less than the total amount that has in effect become the amount due. So again, worse case you only owe your share. At some point you might ask him to ammend your lease. Offer an increased rent amount, something that would add up to 1 or 1.5 months of rent, so you are splitting the difference.
I guess you are in a college town. He may suggest, don't worry you can just sublet. I would avoid that option, most likely your subletters will not pay and also cause damage you will be resonsible for.
Make an appointment with the campus housing office, maybe they can help out. Good luck.

2007-01-03 17:09:08 · answer #2 · answered by Gatsby216 7 · 0 0

well you blew it,because you signed it-the lease and it stated the terms of agreement between you and the landlord,, unless you can prove that you were treated unfairly,, you need to take it up with your landlord,, if he doesn;t work with you,, then you need to talk to housing authority,and possible need a mediator to go between to resolve this issue(which may charge a fee).. Remember once your lease agreement is over,, he can raise your rent if you decide to stay longer, on a month to month after 1 yr,, and/or your revised lease agreement(9 months)..

2007-01-03 15:29:20 · answer #3 · answered by tshark44 5 · 1 0

specific. not something became finalized until the hire became authorized & signed by technique of ALL events. You had no suited to do something until that became accomplished. "would not cashing our deposit of $2800.00 and cashing $1400.00 first months hire bind our settlement? " "under my impact isn't accepting verify and depositing binding." NOPE. purely the hire is legally binding. Your paying the deposit purely holds the situation. It does not propose something better than that. not something became very final or set in stone until the hire became signed by technique of everybody. He does might desire to refund your deposit even with the shown fact that.

2016-12-15 15:14:45 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

will u should have thought of that before signing the lease
its a binding contract

2007-01-03 15:26:10 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

that is totally unfare, you should look into your landlord act. in your city or town. Sounds to me like he is being very sexest and that is wrong and uncalled for and can not be done.

2007-01-03 15:28:57 · answer #6 · answered by mammasita84_06 1 · 0 1

lol

2007-01-03 17:10:54 · answer #7 · answered by Beautiful had a BOY on 3.7.09!!! 3 · 0 1

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