Skip to content.
|
Skip to navigation
Site Map
Accessibility
media relations
partner with us
about us
Contact
Search Site
Advanced Search…
lettings lawyer
Sections
Home
ask landlord/tenant question
Personal tools
You are here:
Home
→
questions
→
My sister wants to replace the heating system at her own expense in her Council owned bungalow but the Council will not allow her to, are they acting legally?
free, easy legal help
ask your lettings law question
: no charge and a quick answer!
one of our lawyers will answer (usually within the day)
come back to us if you need further help
recent questions
Can a landlord retain overpaid rent from one tenant in place of rent not paid by another?
2009-01-01
I have an Assured Shorthold Tenancy Agreement for 12 months but need to vacate after 7 months. Do I have to pay rent for the whole 12 months?
2008-12-30
Do I have any rights as a private tenant to stop my landlord increasing my rent excessively?
2008-12-27
Can I terminate my tenancy two months into the six month term because my landlady and her children are banging and jumping on the ceiling above my flat all the time?
2008-12-23
My disabled tenant got the Council to remove the bath and put in a shower without my consent. I have now had to replace the shower with a bath again for my new tenants. Can I claim compensation?
2008-12-23
More…
Send this page to somebody
Fill in the email address of your friend to send an email with the address.
Address info
Send to
(Required)
The e-mail address to send this link to.
From
(Required)
Your email address.
Comment
A comment about this link.
our free advice sites
about the law answers legal network
Our other specialist free legal advice sites:
motoring law
injury claims
debt and insolvency law
money/consumer law
probate law
business law
employment law
divorce law
family/relationship law
property law
property rental law
immigration law
free legal protection
This site conforms to the following standards:
Section 508
WCAG
Valid XHTML
Valid CSS
Usable in any browser
Ask Law Answers
your own
free legal question.