Act Aditional La Contractul De Inchiriere File
“Let’s do it properly,” he said. “We’ll make an act adițional .”
The next day, Andrei downloaded a template from a legal site. He typed: act aditional la contractul de inchiriere
Andrei owned a two-bedroom apartment in Bucharest’s Drumul Taberei neighborhood. For three years, he had rented it to the Ionescu family—mother, father, and a little girl named Sofia. The contract was standard: €450 per month, utilities separate, no pets, no subletting. Both parties had signed it with a handshake and a photocopy of their IDs. “Let’s do it properly,” he said
The original contract had a “force majeure” clause, but medical emergency wasn’t listed. Without an act adițional explicitly stating that a family health crisis allowed early termination, the Ionescus would lose their deposit (€900) and owe two months’ rent. For three years, he had rented it to
Three months later, the mother-in-law fell and broke her hip. She needed a wheelchair ramp at the building entrance. The building association refused. The Ionescus asked Andrei to modify the contract to allow them to break it without penalty.
So he wrote clause 4:
Andrei’s first instinct was no . More people meant more wear and tear, higher utility bills, potential noise complaints from neighbors. But he also remembered his own grandmother, alone in a village after his parents moved to Italy.