She should have to give your Mother in law a legal notice that she is in violation of the lease.
But she does have a right to request you remove the dog from the property, visiting or not. Your pet is not covered under the lease, if she wants to allow the cat that is her prerogative.
You have no rights through your Mother in laws lease, she can penalize your mother in law for your dog.
2007-01-11 11:54:55
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answer #1
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answered by Wicked Good 6
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Try the sites below. Make sure to change the Location/State to apply. Hope this helps. If you need Legal Protection, click the last site and watch the online movie presentation. This will get you access to a TOP Law Firm in your State.
2007-01-11 20:22:59
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answer #2
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answered by citronge69 4
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My advice is to GET THE DOG OFF THE PROPERTY. Yes, your mother can be penalized and even evicted if those are the express terms of her lease. The "notice" is provided in the lease itself and no more notice is required.
2007-01-11 19:53:45
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answer #3
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answered by cyanne2ak 7
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It was your motherinlaw's responsability to tell you her apartment building dosen't allow pets.I don't think you have a legal right to take your dog anywhere except your home .That is if you own your home you would have the right have a pet.People who need guide dogs such as seeing eye dogs do have the right to have their guides with them all the time.My personal advice is when you go on a trip leave your dog at a boarding house for pets.
2007-01-11 20:21:54
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answer #4
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answered by upforitupforitupforitupforitru 3
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in this situation so contract law applies and if no animals are allowed on the premises and is written in the lease contract your mother-in-law signed, then you (or your mother-in-law) cannot have a pet on the premises.As far as the landlord is concerned, the landlord's contract with her employer might allow her to have a cat on the premises but that contract is between her and her employer and has no bearing on your pet being in your mother-in-law's apartment.
2007-01-11 20:29:14
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answer #5
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answered by attyvette 2
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Legally you cannot have the pet on the property if the lease doesn't stipulate that, even if it is "just visiting".
2007-01-11 20:10:57
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answer #6
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answered by Jamie R 4
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No pets means no pets.
If your mother signed a rent agreement saying no pets, then allowing your dog to "visit" is violating that agreement, and you could get her evicted.
2007-01-11 19:55:14
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I'd think you would profit MUCH more from time spent learning to read and write than you would by trying to violate a lease that was apparently signed willingly.
2007-01-11 20:12:33
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answer #8
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answered by ? 6
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