who breached the contract?
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who breached the contract?
I did not pay rent for feb. Eviction process began, however landlord stopped the process when I paid for feb. and march on March 1. However a stipulation for four months was agreed between the both of us, that I would pay rent no later than the 4th of every month. Later in the month of march, I was called in to sign a new lease that raised the rent. The stipulation was not carried over I wan not able to pay by the forth and now I may be evicted for breach of contract. Did the landlord have the right to raise the rent and ignore the court ordered stipulation?
Asked on May 9, 2009 under Personal Injury, Florida
Answers:
MD, Member, California Bar / FreeAdvice Contributing Attorney
Answered 15 years ago | Contributor
This was a court ordered stipulation? Again, how did the court order a stipulation? If he began eviction proceedings, did the court stop the proceedings because you paid and signed the stipulation? The landlord (depending on the type of lease you have --length) has the right to raise your rent but not until the lease is up. Sounds like you have a month to month or at most by the stipulation a four month lease. You have the responsibility to make sure everything in the contract you sign is what you agreed to (including any previous agreements). If you didn't incorporate the stipulation into the new lease agreement, and the new lease agreement begins past the four month term, you are out of luck.
If it is within the four month term, go to court and ask the court to force the landlord to void the new lease agreement and peform according to the court ordered stipulation.
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