Ok. It may be a little late but at least you'll know better in the future. One thing to do is look into the laws regarding Independant Contractors...that is what you are. In most states you have set rights and there are laws that must be followed on your landlord's part or else you are considered an employee. Check into the laws in your area as they may be different from mine or somewhere else.First of all, as a renter, you do not owe your landlord anything but rent for the space. Ultimately, it is your business and you are merely renting space from him. Think about it...when a business rents space they don't have to pay their landlord based on what they charge or a percentance of anything. It should be a flat rental fee, not a perceneforum.xxxe.Ideally as an IC, you SHOULD handle everything for your business. Marketing, laundry, money collection, appointment booking, sales (including g.c. and you hold on the the g.c. money until it is redeemed), set your own hours and prices. You can pay your landlord "per hour" of rent you use the space or you can be paid a set fee for each service. If he was handling anything than you can be assured he was charging you somehow (maybe the $5 salon fee?). So, that money you got from the gift certificate sales is yours...and if you really think about it you DID NOT have to pay him his portion before you did the work...THAT MONEY IS YOURS, and you basically gave it to him for him doing nothing on his part.So, you can tell him that... or you can tell him that you will pay him his perceneforum.xxxe as they are redeemed to the new therapist (minus a $5 "service fee" on your part...after all, it is your business so you can make the rules), or you can tell him to go jump in the lake and see how it washes out. If the clients are going to him to use the g.c. then he could either have the new MT do the massage (and take a loss on his part because he has to pay the new MT, unless you decide to pay him per redemption) or he can refer them to you. If they come to you, you can do the massage and owe him nothing since you already paid him.Regarding your clients, if you are an IC they are yours and you can let them know where you are going, especially if there were gained through your marketing efforts. So start letting them know...maybe do a mailing and a display ad in the local paper for a couple weeks once you find your new space.If you wanted to you could be quite mean about this situation. If you do not meet the requirments as an IC and the IRS determines that you really were an employee of the salon due to the way your boss wanted you to work and ran the business, your status would then change. In effect, your landlord would have a HUGE problem on his hands. If you reported him to the IRS for investigation into this, he would get audited (as would you...but he doesn't have to know that), and if it is determined that you are in fact an employee and not an IC, he would owe back taxes for the time you were there plus penalties/fines. Not only for you but any "IC" working there that they found to be an employee. You could let him know that this is an option you're prepared to look into if he continue to jerk your chain. That alone may be enough for him to let you go on your terms. The ideal situation would be to extricate yourself as simply as possible and concentrate on building a new business in a more positive environment. Please...if you're going to run a business, educate yourself regarding the laws and find out your rights. Take some business classes...they are a write off. Protect yourself with contracts, agreements, etc. as best as you can. Set your boundaries and present yourself as a professional. There are many mean people out there that prey on others that are nice and trusting...don't be a victim if you can help it. Not everyone may have your integrity. Afterall, this is YOUR business, YOUR livlihood, and YOUR passion. It's success and failure is all up to you...but don't let the jerks discourage you. Best of luck!