Odd terms of a Lease – would I be stupid to sign to this?

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So my skill owner sent me a brand new franchise as well as it says, "Lessee covenants to recompense as well as reason submissive Lessor for as well as opposite any as well as all liability, outset from damage during a tenure of this franchise to chairman or property, occasioned unconditionally or in partial by any action or repudiation of lessee, or of a guests, employees, assigns, or subleases of lessee. " – Does this receptive to advice unlikely to anyone?
I only wish to have certain it doesn’t meant which if Anything happens upon a skill that’s "their fault" eg(faulty palm rail, roof caving in, etc) which we do not pledge any rights.

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Comments (5)

This is saying that you are not going to hold the landlord responsible if you or your guests get hurt because of something you are doing. Let’s say you have a few friends over and they start wrestling and one of them gets hurt. This is not the landlord’s fault. The person got hurt because of something he/she was doing. If someone gets hurt because of neglect on the landlord’s part then that’s not covered by this paragraph. Let’s say there is a loose railing and you told the landlord but he never came to fix it then you or one of your guests got hurt because the railing came loose and caused you to fall. That would be the landlord’s fault. If something does need fixed you should make a note of when you notified the landlord so if something does happen you will have a record of when you told the landlord.

It means if you do something stupid and hurt yourself, you can’t sue your landlord.

I’m pretty sure that’s standard boilerplate lease language.

sounds fine. if you or guests are hurt because of your fault, the landlord will be held harmless. he has attorney writing the lease. you have nobody so be careful. this lease is written to his advantage.

It is just adding into the lease something that should be common sense in the first place. That your landlord isn’t responsible for any injuries to anyone that take place on the property. Of course that would also be held subject to your landlords higher legal requirement to provide the property in a safe, liveable state.

Sounds right. HOWEVER, make sure you have renters insurance for yourself. It’s cheap and a VERY GOOD INVESTMENT.

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