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does that also include bad faith? What im trying to say is that does the party having the power to terminate have to terminate for a reason in good faith or can it be any reason, no matter whether good faith or bad faith?

2007-12-10 08:31:12 · 5 answers · asked by thesunshineking 2 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

5 answers

The whole point of having a lease is so that it cannot be terminated at any time for any reason. If you have a lease that actually says this, then it can be broken for any reason, does not matter what the person's intentions or "good faith" are.
However, this lease is kind of like a contract for buying a car that the dealer can take back for any reason at any time...

2007-12-10 08:38:46 · answer #1 · answered by jonmm 4 · 1 1

Well, if the lease states any reason then it can be any reason. One thing though, make sure the lease is up to snuff with state laws. Some landlords make up leases and put terms in there that are illegal. They may not know it is illegal or they do know but don't expect the tennant to know. Sometimes, the boiler plate lease forms you can get at Office Depot have stuff in them that is against the law in certain states. What I am trying to say is that it may not matter what the lease says if it goes against the law. The law will always have priority.

2007-12-10 16:36:17 · answer #2 · answered by A.Mercer 7 · 2 1

If the lease says any reason, then that lease sucks. The lease should be broken in good faith, I never heard of bad faith.

2007-12-10 16:35:26 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

I agree with RMANN !before I got evicted I went to court so many times ! I should know this!
also thank you for the "Best answer" !!
and like the name "thesunshineking "
"Merry Christmas"

2007-12-11 01:46:48 · answer #4 · answered by DagNaggit limpuladerfy II 4 · 0 1

uh...any reason means "ANY REASON".

2007-12-10 16:37:30 · answer #5 · answered by wizjp 7 · 1 1

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