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The lease says she can only have one(1*) Dog in her apartment but she has two(2*).. They are threatening to evict her other Pet Dog but not her, just the Dog... Can this be possible without them compensating her for the value of the pet Pedigreed Dog?? Legally can they evict the Pedigreed Dog at all??

2007-04-05 00:53:42 · 10 answers · asked by dca2003311@yahoo.com 7 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

10 answers

Yes, if that is against your lease. I know not what you wanted to hear ... but Good Luck!

2007-04-12 16:33:00 · answer #1 · answered by Miss Know It All 6 · 2 0

If the lease states that she can only have one dog than that is all she is allowed to have, and the other dog can and will be removed from the property. If she causes a problem over this, the landlord also legally has the ability to evict her as she is in full violation of the lease agreement which she signed that clearly states that she can only own one dog as long as she is a renter. When you sign a legal binding document as a renter it is the renters full responsibility to adhere to the agreement in which they have signed. She violated the agreement the second she brought a second dog into the rental property, and will either have to comply with what she agreed to, or risk being evicted herself. The fact that the dog is a Pedigree has absolutley nothing to do with any of it, and she will get no compensation at all as she violated her agreement.

2007-04-09 05:15:51 · answer #2 · answered by novastarbanker 3 · 0 0

To answer your question and not give you a hard time for getting two dogs when your lease says you can only have one.
I am not an attorney but I have to say that NO they cannot evict one dog. What they can do is file a case against the OWNER asking the judge to make the owner get rid of the dog or move out. How would a judge make a dog do anything? That is just plain silly. Dogs cannot be defendants in court cases.

2007-04-05 02:48:11 · answer #3 · answered by ebosgramma 5 · 1 0

What the hell is wrong with you? Your lease says 1 dog, and you think you're entitled to some compensation because you're breaking the lease you signed by bringing in 2 dogs?

The landlord can ask you to comply with the rules, but can't actually evict a dog. The landlord can (and should) send you packing though for violating the lease and copping an attitude about it.

2007-04-07 19:58:12 · answer #4 · answered by SndChaser 5 · 1 0

as stated a contract is legal binding document, the parties by signing the contract agree to obey all the terms outline within the contract, if the contract says one pet only then that's it

the party with the two pets have breached the contract as such will have to fix the breach IE removing one dog, and since the party breached the contract the other party does not have to compensate the dog, the fact that it is a pedigree has no barring on the breach of contract

2007-04-05 02:16:30 · answer #5 · answered by goz1111 7 · 0 0

It says ONE it means ONE.
???????? what difference does pedigree make a dog is a dog and one means one....and if she doesn't then the court
will have SPCA remove it.
Legaly binding contracts are legaly binding contracts and if she didn't want to comply then she shouldn't of agreed by signing the lease agreement.
I'm a real estate agent/landlord

2007-04-05 02:09:57 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes. The lease says the second dog is not permitted.

2007-04-05 01:10:15 · answer #7 · answered by open4one 7 · 0 0

The lease is a binding contract. You signed,you agree,or you go.

2007-04-12 18:57:39 · answer #8 · answered by DAGIM 4 · 0 0

you're question is somewhat imprecise. it extremely is why all and sundry isn't getting it. My answer is: No. you does no longer. And neither will God. 2 Peter 3:7 says the fireplace from heaven will merely damage the ungodly, no longer the planet. it really is paralleded to the Flood, the position the human race survived.

2016-12-03 08:02:50 · answer #9 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yes, and good for the landlord for making her comply since she cant listen...

2007-04-09 10:56:22 · answer #10 · answered by Mark P. 5 · 0 0

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