![]() |
|
| *Home>>>Offices to Lease |
My landlord says I can't break my lease even though I'm in the military? |
I'm getting ready to come back to america from overseas and my wife says that she can't break the lease with our landlord, so she'll have to stay in Ohio while I go to Georgia for more military duty. Is the landlord right? If not what can I show him that he can't refute this. what I was wanting to know is, if there is a clause for military members oh yea the landlord is right im a military wife and when my husband was in afganistan and i just moved to hawaii, i was living in ewa beach or 2 months and i had a year lease and my husband wanted to live on base instead bc it would be faster for him to go to work and he will be able to come home for lunch so i went to jag and they said worldwide if your military you are able to break the lease and you dont have to pay nothing.so if anyone trys to say in the future no you cant just call jag, bc buddy you can... i love the military If tou have a contract with a yearly lease you can break it without fees. but its monthly i dont see a problem!!! You should be able to sublet your apartment. I've moved around a lot and when I had to leave before the lease was up, I just paid a fee of $40-60 to sublet my place. You are responsible for the rent until someone takes over your lease. I don't believe this is correct I think military obligation would be just cause to break a lease, check with your Adjutant office It really depends on the state you live in, each state varies in its laws. I live in Wisconsin for example, and here it is illegal for a landlord to require a tenant to pay for having the carpets professionally cleaned when they move out (unless there was severe damage.) I think I would just Google your state, also www.findlaw.com should have a search forum for you. Hope that helps....by the way your landlord really sounds like a jerk! Check your rental agreement. I used to rent in Virginia Beach, where a large percentage of rentors are Navy. All my agreements had military transfer language specifically in the contract, but that may be because of the area. Never rented outside the area, so I don't know if that's the norm or not. give him 30 days notice and pay one month don't worry about the deposited take a copy of your order to the landlord explain to them that your new duty station is in georgia, and that your spouse is going with you, they can't hold her or you to the lease. How do they expect someone to be in georgia, and leave their spouse in ohio, if they don't see it your way contact someone from legal at your command they should be able to help. But usuallly a copy of orders saying your new station should work. good luck, i am a twenty year retired military veteran. Howdy, The first thing to do is carefully read your lease. Not browse it, read and understand every sentence. Is there any clause about moving so many miles away ? The soldiers and sailors act only seems to cover someone who had a lease then joined the military, not someone who was in the military. My first few jobs I had a leases where I could break them with a two month penalty. Since I knew I might have to move I had to have something like that. That might help you in the next lease. I think it may be a matter of negotiating a deal. If you wife stays for 2 months and you pay a 1 or 2 month penalty, will he let you out of the lease? You can say, hey I will move today and you will get nothing, which may or may not be true. Also I would have an attorney write him a letter with a proposal. THE BIGEST QUESTION YOU FORGOT TO TELL US IS... Are you and your wife on the lease? If you are both on the lease it maybe easy for you not to have an obligation, BUT your wife does not have orders, an obligation to the Military. This is from personal experience from living in Columbus GA and having the same problem. We still owe that appartment complex because the Military would only move us (my family) once so it was either take all the furniture and move it for free or leave it for my spouse and have to pay. Go see your comander (go through the chain of cammand and ask to speak with your captain/commander) ask them to make a phone call to the landlord (may actually do alot of good) to help settle this situation. Other than that, don't know what state renting in but do a google search for- your states renters rights. Find the nearest military base and hit the JAG office up. Tell them the situation. They will be able to write a letter for you to take to your landlord explaining to him a section of the military that is allowed to move and break a lease when rders are issued. Dependents are considered under orders at the same time a sponsor is ordered away. Tell the landlord that under the SSRA that their is a military clause dealing with apartment rentals and that you can give all copies of orders, etc. to them if needed. Same thing happened to me. Your landlord is a jerk. A copy of your orders should be enough. If it isn't go to the JAG office and I'm sure they would be DELIGHTED to write a letter on your behalf. Ask him to do what is right not legal. "A Military Clause Is A Must In Your Lease Depending on your state and what your lease says....you should have the milatary clause, but, some management companies hold the spouse responsible. I work at a property management company in Ft Hood, Texas, we personally do not make the spouse carry out the lease term, but some companies do, you really need to read your lease. Should you have any other compalints, there should be a state run Real Estate Commission you could go to, in Texas we have The Texas Real Estate Commission (TREC). Good luck and God Bless! I just googled "Georgia & Landlord/tenant laws.....there is a section 44-7-37 that states. after reading all these responses... Unfortunately, Ohio's landlord/tenant statutes do not contain a clause allowing military personnel to break a lease. If the lease itself does not contain this language, you might be out of luck. Perhaps a letter from your commanding officer about the reassignment and your reassignment paperwork can change his mind. But he is under no obligation to allow you to break your lease without penalty. Every state is different...but in the state I live in, if you've got a lease- then you are bound to it. If you break it for whatever reason, it is up to the landlord whether or not to hold you responsible...the only thing he can do is sue you for the rent on the remaining lease...but- if he is able to rent the property again then he can't charge you for that- because he legally cannot collect double rent on a property..example- if you move out and you've got 3 months left on your lease- if he rents the property again within that 3 months...then legally he cannot make you pay the remaining rent...if he does not rent it again...then legally he CAN make you pay for the remaining 3 months....hope this helps...sorry it was so long...I wasn't sure how to explain it...if you have any questions you can email me... As long as you have a hard copy of your orders in hand to turn into your landlord, he has no choice but to break your lease. I recently did it when I left VA and came to WA!! You should not have to pay anything extra either to more out! |
| Tags |
| Meeting Room Meeting Space Conference Room Offices to Lease Rent Offices Business Centers Service Offices Branch Offices Temporary Offices Shared Offices |
| Related information |
I have no idea. ...I could give you all the legal mumbo-jumbo, but I won't. In general when you sign a lease there is NOTHING the landlord can do to force you out, as long as you are abiding by the terms of the... Sorry for your bad luck but you are committed to the contract you signed. If you break the lease they will likely sue you which will hurt your credit and make it tough for you to get an apartment ... You could use it but you would have to come to an agreement with the person with whom you have the lease with. You are technically breaking a contract. Keep in mind they might make you pay a portio... PLEASE don't listen to christmas mac daddy! You'd be sorry. The only way you can break the lease is if your living conditions don't meet health & safety codes. #1. Problems w/... I strongly doubt your states statutes allow provisions for a renting agency to determine what contractor you may or may not use. But since you're moving out anyway, I would probably go with th... depends on the lease. he may not be able to. ...I've never heard of an apartment needing to keep copies of your orders. Those are official military documents. Most apartment complexes have military clauses that clear you to leave without pe... |
Categories--Copyright/IP Policy--Contact Webmaster |