Tyga Slapped With A Six-Figure Bill, Faces Court Case

Tyga is being forced to pay a landlord a couple of weeks after reaching a settlement with another property owner. The rapper was reportedly slapped with a six-figure bill from F&S Investment Property after renting out a Los Angeles home used to run his side business, Egypt Last Kings Clothing.
Attorneys for F&S Investment Property filed court documents, alleging that Tyga breached the lease by "failing to pay rent and other amounts due" when he abandoned the premises without due notice in June 2015. When the house was inspected, documents probes that the premises was left in "gross disrepair, utility bills unpaid and hazardous environmental waste that required professional clean-up."
Now that the F&S Investment Property has landed a new tenant in November 2015, Tyga is only responsible for five months of unpaid rent between June and October. The bill, however, sums up to the tune of $89,000 and that doesn't include late fees.
On the authority of the court documents, damages ultimately totaled more than $131,000 with attorney fees surpassing $37,000 for a final judgment of $186,275.89.
The news comes less than two weeks after the rapper and his legal camp were able to reach a settlement with another landlord in an eviction case.
"There has been a settlement reached to the mutual satisfaction of the parties," Danny Abir, of Abir Cohen Treyzon Salo, LLP, told E! News, but noted that the terms of their settlement were "confidential."
Attorneys for Tyga's landlord filed court documents, that revealed that he agreed to pay $16,000 per month for the plaintiff's house.

Three months after moving in, Kylie Jenner's boyfriend reportedly halted paying rent and the landlord attempted to have the rapper thrown out.
On leaving the property, the landlord discovered that Tyga had inflicted major damages on the home, leaving it in massive disarray including tearing off the automatic gate opener and damaging bathroom tiles. The cost of the damages mounts up to a whooping sum of $480,000. Oops!