Answer
Jan 30, 2025 - 01:14 AM
That's a lease violation. So you can actually... have that be grounds for breaking the lease, and you can talk to an attorney about how to proceed with that. But technically, they are actually in a lease violation if you require renter's insurance, and they have either stopped their policy on purpose, or they don't want to get it to begin with, then you don't have to accept them as a tenant.