Notice to Quit. Landlord shall have the right to deliver written notice to Tenant to quit possession and occupancy of the Premises and to declare the Lease terminated. Upon Landlord’s termination of this Lease, Tenant shall quit and peaceably surrender the Premises, and all portions thereof, to Landlord, and Landlord shall have the right to receive all rental and other income of and from the same. At Landlord’s election, any written notice of default may also be designated a notice to quit (provided that nothing in this sentence shall be deemed to deny Tenant the right to applicable cure periods set forth in Section 13.1, above).
Notice to Quit. Landlord shall have the right to deliver written notice to Tenant to quit possession and occupancy of the Premises and to declare the Lease terminated. Upon Landlord’s termination of this Lease, Tenant shall quit and peaceably surrender the Premises, and all portions thereof, to Landlord, and Landlord shall have the right to receive all rental and other income of and from the same.
Notice to Quit. Tenant waives the right to any notice to remove as may be specified in the Pennsylvania Landlord and Tenant Act of April 6, 1951, as amended, or any similar successor. provision of law, and agrees that fifteen (15) days notice shall be sufficient in any case where a longer period may be statutorily specified.
Notice to Quit. LESSXX xxxves notice to quit and agrees to surrender the Leased Premise, at the expiration of said term, or the termination of this Lease or any renewal thereof, without any notice whatsoever.
Notice to Quit. If the time required in the final notice has passed and the plot holder has failed to sufficiently bring their plot up to a reasonable level of cultivation, then the Council will issue the plot holder with a one months’ notice to quit.
Notice to Quit. 8. The Landlord may serve a notice to quit upon the tenant by posting or delivering it by hand to the Property.
Notice to Quit. A notice to quit will be issued if there is insufficient evidence of working on the plot identified. • The notice to quit will give the plotholder 7 days to quit the plot and remove all personal possessions.
Notice to Quit a formal notice to end your tenancy. It must comply with the legal requirements for a notice to quit and be given to the landlord. Property – your home including any outside areas that are for your sole use. Rent – the total charge due for living in the Property as set out at paragraph 2.2 Service charge – the part of your rent that covers charges for services or facilities that you benefit from. This charge is often made to tenants who benefit from common or shared facilities that require maintenance such as communal gardens, entrance ways or lifts. The Council has a service charge policy which sets out the basis of the charge in detail. Not everyone will have a service charge. Succession – the process by which someone legally takes on the tenancy of a deceased family member. The/ your Property – the house/ flat or bungalow you are renting as described at paragraph 2.5 of this agreement. We/ us/ the Landlord/ the Council – refers to Bolsover District Council and anyone acting on its behalf. You/ the tenant – if you are a joint tenant ‘you’ or ‘the tenant’ refers to both tenants together and individually. Where appropriate it also covers people you are responsible for such as family members and visitors.
Notice to Quit. (a) The landlord must give the tenant at least 6 months written notice for a Notice to Quit.
Notice to Quit. If rent has not been paid in full within 15 days of the due date, the Owner will automatically have the right to start the eviction process and have the Tenant(s), family, and possessions removed from the leased property. This is the NOTICE TO QUIT. No posting or letter is required as this is automatically stated in this lease and accepted by the Tenant upon signing of this lease. The Tenant is given a 10-day notice from the 5th to the 15th of the month. The Tenant again acknowledges this Notice to Quit upon signing this lease. At any time the Tenant breaches this lease (unpaid rent, damaging property, not paying utilities, uncleanliness, being loud and disorderly, etc.), Owners have the right to start the eviction process.