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7 answers

Yes. If you never paid your last months rent or broke your lease you can be sued. Just because you move does not mean the debt goes away. Your best bet is to pay up before it hits court so it does not hit your credit.

2007-12-12 15:51:05 · answer #1 · answered by _nicole_ 4 · 1 0

Of course. You are responsible for all months you didn't pay plus the late fee's if there were any. Also if your landlord went through the courts to get you out, you'll have court cost. Why do tenant think that they can not pay rent and just live free? I have a mortgage and if I didn't make a monthly payment the bank would take back my house.

2007-12-12 22:16:01 · answer #2 · answered by Classy Granny 7 · 1 0

Absolutely!!!!! Without a doubt.

If you owe back rent, or if you broke the lease without consent or making arrangements that legally extinguished you from any further obligation...

If you were evicted, you still owe for what you didn't pay, and a lot of times you are held responsible for eviction fee's and court proceedings..

2007-12-12 15:40:22 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

This time you like an criminal expert. In maximum super cities there are criminal experts who preserve tenant rights circumstances. in case you touch your state Bar association, they'd grant a itemizing of criminal experts who will grant help to the two freed from charge or on a sliding scale. you may think of roughly suing the owner. At minimum ask for criminal expert's costs in case you pass back to court docket.

2016-12-11 03:08:10 · answer #4 · answered by giallombardo 4 · 0 0

Most certainly, if you owe the rent. Leaving the premises does not extinguish the debt you owe for rents.

2007-12-12 15:31:54 · answer #5 · answered by acermill 7 · 1 0

absolutely if you didn't pay rent like you were supose to while living in the house they can sue you for it. what did you think it was free!

2007-12-12 19:09:07 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

if you did not follow the law by giving
proper notice, he-she sure can sue
you for one or more months' rent.

HOWEVER, if the unit is immediately
rented to someone else, his
collectable rent is reduced by the amount he collected by the new tenant IF IN The first month after you leave!

2007-12-12 16:57:09 · answer #7 · answered by kemperk 7 · 0 3

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