Common use of ENTRY BY OWNER Clause in Contracts

ENTRY BY OWNER. If Resident, his guest, or other occupant is present, then repairmen, servicemen, or Owner’s representative may enter the apartment during reasonable times for reasonable business purposes. If no one is in the apartment, the above listed persons may enter at reasonable times by duplicate or master key, provided that (1) written notice of such entry is left in the apartment immediately thereafter and (2) such entry is for: responding to Resident’s request; repairs; estimating cost of repairs or refurbishing; extermination; preventive maintenance; changing filters; retrieving unreturned tools or appliances; emergency safety or fire inspections; avoiding property damage; preventing waste of utilities; exercising contractual lien; leaving notices; removing unauthorized locks, latches or window coverings; retrieving property owned or leased by a former Resident; showing apartment to prospective Residents (after move-out or vacate notice has been given); or showing apartment to government inspectors, fire marshals, mortgage lenders, appraisers, prospective purchasers, or insurance agents.

Appears in 10 contracts

Samples: Apartment Lease and Contract, Apartment Lease and Contract, Apartment Lease and Contract

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ENTRY BY OWNER. If Resident, his guest, or other occupant is present, then repairmen, servicemen, or Owner’s representative may enter the apartment during reasonable times for reasonable business purposes. If no one is in the apartment, the above listed persons may enter at reasonable times by duplicate or master key, provided that (1) written notice of such entry is left in the apartment immediately thereafter and (2) such entry is for: responding to Resident’s request; repairs; estimating cost of repairs or refurbishing; extermination; preventive maintenance; changing filters; retrieving unreturned tools or appliances; emergency safety or fire inspections; avoiding property damage; preventing waste of utilities; exercising contractual lien; leaving notices; removing unauthorized locks, latches or window coverings; retrieving property owned or leased by a former Resident; showing apartment to prospective Residents (after move-out or vacate notice has been given); or showing apartment to government inspectors, fire marshals, mortgage lenders, appraisers, prospective purchasers, or insurance agents.

Appears in 5 contracts

Samples: Apartment Lease and Contract, Apartment Lease and Contract, Apartment Lease and Contract

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