Common use of Jointly and Severally Liable Clause in Contracts

Jointly and Severally Liable. Each Tenant(s) is jointly and severally liable for all Lease Agreement obligations. If any Tenant(s), guests, or occupant violates the Lease Agreement, all Tenant(s) are considered to have violated the Lease Agreement. Management Company’s requests and notices to any one Tenant(s) constitute notice to all Tenant(s) and occupants. Notices and requests from any one Tenant(s) or occupant (including repair requests and entry permissions) constitute notice from all Tenant(s). In eviction suits, each Tenant(s) is considered the agent of all other Tenants in the Premise for service of process. A notice to vacate or to modify the lease must be signed by all Tenant(s) or it will not be considered valid. In the event that some but not all of the Tenants vacate the Premises, the security deposit shall be deemed the property of the last Tenant to vacate the Premises.

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: Rental Agreement, Rental Agreement

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