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Old 04-17-2014, 09:10 PM
 
1 posts, read 1,228 times
Reputation: 10

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I have signed and given a 60 day notice to my apartment complex. They have a certain form they require tenants to fill out. I had a roommate that works out of town and has recently moved there without giving me any notice. They are refusing to accept my 60 day notice unless my room mate comes in the office and signs it as well. Even though they are no longer a resident here and I'm not in contact with them anymore. Is there any legal way I can make them take my 60 day notice without of my ex roommate signing the form.
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Old 04-17-2014, 09:44 PM
 
Location: NYC
16,062 posts, read 26,743,916 times
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Did you ask the apartment manager? A notarized letter may work.
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Old 04-18-2014, 05:08 AM
 
2,003 posts, read 2,880,361 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by elephant36 View Post
I have signed and given a 60 day notice to my apartment complex. They have a certain form they require tenants to fill out. I had a roommate that works out of town and has recently moved there without giving me any notice. They are refusing to accept my 60 day notice unless my room mate comes in the office and signs it as well. Even though they are no longer a resident here and I'm not in contact with them anymore. Is there any legal way I can make them take my 60 day notice without of my ex roommate signing the form.
You can't MAKE them do anything. You're going to have to throw yourself on their mercy. If the roommate signed the lease, the roommate has to consent to ending the lease. Find the former roommate and get them to sign the form.
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Old 04-19-2014, 02:18 PM
 
419 posts, read 553,360 times
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Sounds like you will have to contact the roommate either way. If they signed the lease, they are still liable for the rent they owe but it's probably on you to collect it. The apartment manager doesn't care who pays it, only that it does get paid. Right now it's on you 100% since the roommate is MIA. Sounds like you need to get back in contact with this person to sign the 60-day notice or find a new roommate for the remainder of your lease.
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