My Lease Says What?
Jurisdiction | Wyoming,United States |
Citation | Vol. 31 No. 2 Pg. 6 |
Pages | 6 |
Publication year | 2008 |
Vol. 31, No. 2, #6. My Lease Says What?
Issue: April, 2008
As the centuries progressed and tenants moved off the land and migrated to the cities, a shift occurred in landlord and tenant law. It became obvious that it was no longer the land that was the important feature of the leasehold conveyance but the dwelling unit upon the land. Prospective tenants searching for housing began to be presented with residential leases that bound them to their landlords in a contractual relationship. And so it was that landlord and tenant law began to become a combination of ancient British property law and the law of contracts.
Why a Lease?
A landlord usually will require a written lease to be assured that he will receive a specified rent for a specified period of time. He will also want to define his rights and remedies against a tenant who may default on her obligation to pay rent or who may damage the property. These are legitimate reasons to require a written lease.
A tenant, on the other hand, may want a lease to be assured that her right to occupy the property is not disturbed and to be guaranteed that the rent will not be adjusted during the term of the lease. These, too, are legitimate reasons to require a written lease.
A good lease, like any fair contract document, will attempt to balance the rights and responsibilities of the signatory parties. But in landlord and tenant law the reality is often that a tenant is presented with a document drafted by the landlord and then told that if the rental unit is to be hers, she...
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