Well the first part of this should be: 1. was there a walk thru when you signed the rental agreement, & was any mildew or mold noted? 2. if not then the mildew/mold may be from one of two sources.. such as a leak like a pipe the tenant has no control over or moisture caused by the tenant/s actions or inaction.. such as humidity from showers not being vented properly thru a fan or window.. drapes closed over cold window, so that there is no air flow.. thus causing condensation. on the window frames... In either case, the tenant needs to contact the landlord at once!! by phone and as required in the Satute in writing... interestingly this is not address in 90.320 as a habitablity issue.. and just this year a study from the Nat. accadamy of Sciences concluded no link from mold to disease .. Once you notify the Landlord.. they need only respond within 7 days.. for such issues and make a good faith effort to address the concern.. to start with.. A mold test to determine if it is mold, and not mildew is costly.. cleaning first is the usual step..
One what?
A landlord can, at any time, initiate eviction proceedings against the tenant if he fails to pay his rent on time. Normally the landlord does this after the fifth day of default.
You will remain a runaway until you are an adult. That means age 18 in Oregon.
DEPENDS ON THE SHERRIFF IN YOU COUNTY
the Oregon trail was 2000 miles long.
Until you appear before the issuing judge
NO
This depends on what state and country you are in, and what kind of notice was given.
The landlord is required to make reasonable attempts to notify the former tenant that he must remove his possessions. How long the landlord must wait before he disposes of the items depends on how much time the tenant has paid rent for. The time also depends on the jurisdiction.
depends on what you agreed with the landlord, there is no set time
If it is not in the written agreement then yes they must notify you within 60 days but if it is then no they do not have to.
..... If you have a household runway maybe