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29 December, 22:25

Jeff Kase and his wife, Caren, have spent two months looking at apartments in Los Angeles. But every apartment they've seen has been too expensive, or too tiny, or too rodent-infested. When Jeff is driving home from work one day, he sees a "For Rent" sign in front of an apartment complex in a nice neighborhood. He uses his cell to call the number on the sign, and the landlord happens to live upstairs, and can show Jeff the apartment immediately. The good news is, Jeff loves it and the landlord says he can hold it with a deposit until Jeff's wife can see it. The bad news is that Caren is out of town until the next evening, so that's the earliest she can see it. The landlord tells Jeff that, unfortunately, the lease agreements for all his properties specify that lease deposits are "nonrefundable." Which of the following statements is true of this situation

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  1. 29 December, 23:31
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    It is illegal for rental security deposits in california to be labelled as "nonrefundable," under any circumstances.

    Explanation:

    It is well known that in the United States every state rules in a different way, in this case California has rules about security deposits that have as objective to protect the landlords as well as the tenants, these rules include things that should be taken into account, such as the amount the landlords can charge or the deductions that can take place. However, about landlords making security deposits nonrefundable this is something that is considered illegal.
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