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Terminating a Lease Oldsmar FL

If a roommate is acting erratic and making you afraid to live in your shared rental home you may not know what to do. Find out what you can do under contract law to get out of your lease and, hopefully, relieve yourself of responsibility for your half of the rent.

Debra Maller Chadwick
727-785-7606
2140 Muirfield Way
Oldsmar, FL
C Spencer Petty
405 Woods Landing Trl
Oldsmar, FL
Jeffrey Mark Sherman
813-855-0700
3874 Tampa Rd
Oldsmar, FL
Deborah Lynn Appel
813-789-2018
Po Box 1083
Oldsmar, FL
Robert Charles Bishop
813-855-4663
Po Box 1063
Oldsmar, FL
Stewart Lawrence Krug
727-560-0386
4738 Pebble Brook Dr
Oldsmar, FL
David Joseph Kirby
727-785-7195
310 Palmdale Dr
Oldsmar, FL
Robert John Varkonyi
813-925-8505
180 Pine Ave N
Oldsmar, FL
Brent Alan Rees
140 Pine Ave N
Oldsmar, FL
Mark Stuart Cattell
813-855-1205
727 Shore Dr E
Oldsmar, FL
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Terminating a Lease


I signed a lease for a condo with another woman. She then started calling the police, saying I was acting weird; she was hassling me because I would not give her money. I was afraid of being arrested because of her allegations, so I moved out and sent the landlord a letter saying it was impossible to stay because I was extremely afraid of the person's conduct, concerned for my safety, welfare and possible false arrest. Does the law permit leaving under such circumstances?

It sounds like you did the right thing, from a safety standpoint, but you won't necessarily be excused from being responsible for the rent.

Until the landlord terminates a lease, a tenant usually must pay the rent unless the landlord fails to maintain the rental in a livable condition. Truth is, it is not your landlord's fault that your co-tenant is dotty.

If you could turn back the hands of time, it would have been better to approach the landlord before you moved out, explaining the situation and asking to be let out of the lease. Most landlords will excuse a tenant if the situation is truly dangerous, but may be less likely to listen to your tale after you've gone and they're left looking for the lost rental income.

Your hope now should be that your former landlord will simply look to the remaining tenant for the full rent, and leave you alone.


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