If the agreement requires consent The tenant should ask you first. You can reasonably refuse or allow (e.g. due to overcrowding, mortgage/insurance limits). If the agreement is silent the tenant is generally allowed to have a partner live with them....
Reply to the comment left by Jim K at 04/06/2024 - 12:47The Police told me I could not claim or sue them. They would, though, wouldn't they? In my case, the main door to the building was so damaged that...
The only thing you know for certain is that the water is coming from the flat or the communal area outside your flat. So, the council is the freeholder and, in my book, they are responsible. I don't think it...
7th January 2026, 4 months ago
If the agreement requires consent The tenant should ask you first. You can reasonably refuse or allow (e.g. due to overcrowding, mortgage/insurance limits). If the agreement is silent the tenant is generally allowed to have a partner live with them....
Read More →18th June 2024, 2 years ago
Hello clouds, hello sky! Reform are offering the Moon on a stick... you won't even get the stick.
Read More →Reply to comment left by Jim K at 04/06/2024 - 12:47
Reply to the comment left by Jim K at 04/06/2024 - 12:47The Police told me I could not claim or sue them. They would, though, wouldn't they? In my case, the main door to the building was so damaged that...
Read More →4th June 2024, 2 years ago
The only thing you know for certain is that the water is coming from the flat or the communal area outside your flat. So, the council is the freeholder and, in my book, they are responsible. I don't think it...
Read More →