Q&A with John Reno, Eviction Attorney
The Landlord Protection Agency® is proud to introduce John Reno, Esq., a highly experienced Landlord - Tenant attorney based on Long Island, NY.
Mr. Reno has engaged in Landlord / Tenant practice in the District Courts of Nassau and Suffolk for the last 20 years. He prides himself on prompt legal action and direct client service.
"Over ninety percent of our practice in the Landlord Tenant courts consists of evictions of tenants, primarily for non-payment of rent. We also assist landlords in preparation and/or review of leases and consultation on other matters affecting the Landlord - Tenant relationship.
We find that Landlords who contact us have often waited too long to commence an eviction, usually in an understandable effort to resolve problems amicably. Landlords need attorneys who will not compound the problem with unnecessary delays or expenses. For this reason, our main priority is immediate action. In most cases, we commence an eviction within 3 days of being hired and have our client's cases in Court within 7 to 10 days of being hired."
If you are a landlord with a tenant problem you'd like to ask a question about, please feel free to e-mail me your question.
Please Note: Mr. Reno is an active practicing attorney with limited time and will do his best to respond to relevant questions. The high volume of e-mails may require the LPA to enter your question into the LPA's Landlord Q&A Forum.
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Published 2008-11-26
Dear Mr. Reno:
My landlord is trying to evict me and we are going to court tomorrow. I have rented for 38 months but only had a lease for the first 12 months. We have been on month to month bases the last 26. He is suing me for 3 months rent, late fees and court cost. I have been told that I only owe him for one month’s rent and no late fees since we were not in a contractual agreement. Is that correct?
I did offer to pay him $200 more per month until I caught up to avoid court and eviction. He said he would have to have $2,500 and $400 per month extra. Of course if I had that, I wouldn’t be in this position.
What are my rights if any? Thanks so much for your help,
Beverlee Belding, Mississippi
A:
No. If you pay the rent, you can stay. If you don't, then you can't. Why did you fall so far behind? You waited too long. Then you wrote me a whole one day before Court. See a pattern? (I'm answering your Tuesday night so I'm sitting here wondering what happened.)
Dear Mr. Reno:
MY FATHER HAS BEEN IN AND OUT OF THE HOSPITAL. DURING HIS CURRENT HOSPITAL STAY HE WAS SERVED WITH AN EVICTION NOTICE. THE LANDLORD AND HIM HAD AN ARRANGEMENT WORKED OUT PRIOR TO THE EVICTION NOTICE. BUT HE WILL MISS HIS COURT DATE BECAUSE HE'S IN THE HOSPITAL. HOW CAN I STOP THE PROCEEDINGS?
KIKI FROM NYC
A:
Go to Court, answer the Calendar call. Tell the Judge. (Bring Admissions Confirmation from Hospital) There you go.
Dear Mr. Reno:
I moved into an apartment that the previous tenant vacated due to bed bugs, I was not aware of the problem until after I moved in and someone reported the issue. I notified the landlord and an exterminator was sent out a month later. I was never given a lease and I invoked my right to use my security as rent, and now she is demanding that I vacate, yet I am still being bitten by bed bugs, and have had to discard my furniture, it’s a total nightmare. Sorry forgot the question: because the landlord was aware of the issue prior to me moving in can I sue them for mishandling the situation and knowingly renting me an infested apartment?
Diane Larancuent, New Jersey
A:
Bed bugs are a horror and I know that from personal experience. I wish you could sue the landlord but how are you going to prove he knew? You know he'll deny it. Even if you have proof of a prior treatment, he'll say he thought it was resolved. Try it. Maybe he'll settle.
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Published 2008-11-25
Dear Mr. Reno:
I had a lease with a tenant that indicated that if they do not get the carpet professionally cleaned upon move out that a portion of their deposit would be held to do so. Also a cleaning list was provided to help them understand how to clean the place in order to get their full deposit back, their deposit was $1000.00. Once they moved out I had to pay people to clean it took them two eight hour days to get the buoggers off the walls, scrap up the black stuff that had accumulated just under the refrigerator, patch the hole in the wall, put hangers on the closet doors and rehang them, replace the kitchen faucet where the handle now spun freely all the way around. In addition I had a professional cleaner come in and clean the black carpet (the orignial color was tan), I guess you get the picture this in my guess was not ordinary cleaning as a result of "normal" wear and tear. My question, in reviewing the Landlord tenant act I understand that I can not keep the deposit for "normal" or "ordinary" wear and tear, but where does normal and ordinary turn into out right neglect and abuse and can I charge the tenants for having to pay to return the place to the condition it was when they moved in, (that of which the Land Lord Tenant act requires them to leave it"? Thank you.
M. Waters, Anchorage Alaska
A:
No one can really answer the questions with any certainty. But usually how it works is, you present a paid bill for the repairs you made and any out of pocket payment is generally assumed to be reasonable. My experience is that when the landlord has proof of payment for repairs, they win.
Dear Mr. Reno:
I have a question regarding a tenant that is suing us for retroactive rent. $8000.00 in small claims. We have keep his deposit due to a lot of work that need to be done both inside and out. They did not keep up with the yard work and about 100 holes left in the walls from nails and screws. cleaning everything due to the fact that it looked like a bomb hit it. They left the place a total disaster compared to when they moved in...
There is one stipulation that they are trying to use, which is... We had a roof that needed to be replaced over the kitchen and we had 4 contractors out there. One contractor tried to fix it but it had to be replaced. So it took about 2 months for the roof to be placed. Nothing happened to any of their property and the ceiling only showed signs of a minor leak but only when it really pour down heavy rain. After the roof was replace, the ceiling only need some spackle and a little paint but no major repairs. They are trying to claim that the place was inhabitable for they to live but never called upon an inspector or anything of the sort....
Do we have anything to worry about in the small claims lawsuit? Are we responsible for abatement due to the living situation, even though they continued to pay rent, during and after the roof was being fixed? This lawsuit came about due to the fact that we kept their deposit to fix up the property.
Please let me know what we should do and if we even need to hire an attorney...
Zachary, Phoenixville, PA
A:
I don't think they have a leg to stand on, as you've stated the facts. If they "abate" (reduce) the rent during that period, figure anywhere from 10% to 50% for the 2 mos., but I would say probably nothing or close to 10%. (Bring all your repair records.)
Dear Mr. Reno:
I just rented to a woman and her 22 year old son. She signed the lease saying that her son was only going to leave with her part time.
Well it hasn't even been two weeks since she moved in and I've come to find out her son, his girlfriend, and their infant (and a dog) are all living there.
She said it was only going to be temporary, till middle of December. I only changed them rent for two people and I'm do to collect my first months rent tomorrow.
Do you have any suggestions on how I handle this if the son,girlfriend, baby and dog don't move out.
Thanks, Ed Raheb, Port Jervis, NY
A:
If its a default under the lease, you can serve them a notice of default and give them a deadline to correct it. The question is, does your lease give you the right to cancel the lease for such a default? If your does, you could evict them if they don't correct it. (I'd be happy to get the rent, myself.)
Dear Mr. Reno:
I am the Asst. Manager of a Self Storage Facility and I am curious if the landlord issues discussed on this site would be relevant to the self storage issue that I may and have occurred over the years. Tina Dilbeck, Assistant Manager
A:
And the self storage issue is....?
Dear Mr. Reno:
On the September 6th 2008, a tenant and I have signed "Residential Lease Agreement", for a period of 12 months , expiring on September 6th 2009.
On November 1st of 2008 the tenant told me that he is giving me a 30 day notice, because he fell in love and wants to get married.
I have told him that I will try to help him so I placed an ad on Craig's List (same way I advertised before). Tenant told me that I can show the place ASAP.
Not many people have been interested, but someone decided to come look at it today.
Tenant did not take his stuff from the studio and I have not seen him around for a week or two.
What should I do? Should I call police and tell them that my tenant is missing? The place looks like he left it in rush.
Tenant did not pay me November rent, but has told me to take the money form "First and last month payment".
I appriciate your advice.
Thank you. Vesna, Turlock, CA
A:
If he hasn't taken his stuff, you can't assume he's vacated. You're not going to be able to do anything until 12/1, unless you hear from Loverboy. At that point, you may have to start an eviction. If his stuff is there, he hasn't vacated. Sorry.
Dear Mr. Reno:
Can I be charged for unpaid rent by my ex-roommate that got behind on rent and evicted after I moved out even if I didn’t sign anything?
(I just moved in his apartment he already had then HE put my name on some paper as a roommate but I never signed anything and moved out six months before he got behind)
Kent
A:
Probably not. I don't understand what your roommate's beef is with you. Is he claiming your breached your agreement with him? He could try it in small claims court, but the burden will be on him to convince the judge you did something wrong, and he'll have an uphill battle with that.
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Published 2008-11-24
Dear Mr. Reno:
My mobile home rentals are week to week, I have very simple lease documents.
I want to raise the original security deposit from 125. to 300. or even higher
(based on evidence of abuse to the rental)
Can I do this and how?
thank you for your time
Rex, Indiana
A:
You have to make it a term of the lease renewal when the lease expires. You can request it during the lease term, but only if the tenant agrees. You have no leverage at that juncture.
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Published 2008-11-22
Dear Mr. Reno:
After 4 years my tenants have moved out. The
hardwood floors are trashed - the repair is 3300.00 more than the
security deposit. Can I take them to court??? thanks
Kara Busch, California
A:
Yes, of course you can. (Bring your paid bill with you.)
Dear Mr. Reno:
We are in New York State and own property in Montgomery Co. We have a tenant who is section 8 and now on a month to month lease with us, the landlord.
We want her out. We have told her we are not renewing her section 8 lease now that it has expired and she needs to find another apt. She said she found an apt. but I found out from section 8 that it did not pass inspection. I called her today to see if she has found another apt. because we wanted her out Dec. 1st. She said we will have to wait and that she would go to court. She has been disruptive. She has called the police numerous time regarding a boyfriend and now she is harrassing our other tenant and has called the police with accusations twice, once that we witnessed ourselves. Our tenant that is being harrassed said they are going to the police dept. tomorrow to file papers against her and if she doesn't move they will have to and they are good tenants. My question is how do we get her out and how quickly can we do this? Do we need to hire an evictions attorney?
Thank you for your help. Gary and Nancy
A:
Yes, unfortunately, you probably do. Since she's Section 8, I assume she's current on her rent. That means you have to serve a one month's notice- then evict as a holdover. You'll have to hurry if you want to give the notice before 11/30. Get going.
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Published 2008-11-21
Dear Mr. Reno:
Hello, I live in Michigan. My husband moved out about 3 months ago leaving me and my kids to fend for ourselves. I had just lost my job 3 weeks prior to him leaving. He and I are both on the lease, is he responsible for paying the rent till the lease is up?
Paula, Michigan
A:
Well, there's good new and bad news. The good news is he is still responsible. He'll be liable for 50% of any money judgment the landlord might get. The bad news is you can still get evicted, even though you might pay your half. The landlord can evict everyone if he doesn't get the full rent.
Dear Mr. Reno:
I have an issue where tenants have laundry hookups in their apartments, unfortunately there's been a few incidents where there has been water spills down to the below apartments. I also notice a lot of wood with water damage each time I go in to replace ceiling tiles. I have seen enough and have decided to do away with their laundry hookups. Am I in my right to proceed with this? I have sent out a notice on the situation and the reason behind my actions. I bought the premises a year ago and it seems this has been a constant problem from before and I don't want to see the structure suffer any longer. The older tenants are month to month, where as the tenants I've brought in are on a yearly lease (my leases have no statement such as; "laundry hookups provided" even though I realize tenants see the hookups and are delighted. please advise, apartments are in Massachusetts.
I have an issue where tenants have laundry hookups in their apartments, unfortunately there's been a few incidents where there has been water spills down to the below apartments. I also notice a lot of wood with water damage each time I go in to replace ceiling tiles. I have seen enough and have decided to do away with their laundry hookups. Am I in my right to proceed with this? I have sent out a notice on the situation and the reason behind my actions. I bought the premises a year ago and it seems this has been a constant problem from before and I don't want to see the structure suffer any longer. The older tenants are month to month, where as the tenants I've brought in are on a yearly lease (my leases have no statement such as; "laundry hookups provided") even though I realize tenants see the hookups and are delighted. please advise, apartments are in Massachusetts. JORGE M. MATOS, Massachussetts
A:
You may have troubles. You are meddling with the forces of nature. I say that because you are changing the house rules- (argumentably a material term of the lease hold -in this case) unilaterally. If they don't sqwauk, go for it. But I think there will be a full scale rebellion. You're on shaky ground.
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Published 2008-11-20
Dear Mr. Reno:
If a tenant breaks her lease after only being there 3mths do i owe back the deposit? and do she still owe me rent from the 1st to the 18th was when she was there to the time she move out which was the 18th. Danielle Batiste
A:
Keep the deposit. If she sues- then you can counter-sue for breaking the lease, damages, etc.
Dear Mr. Reno:
I have a tenant that was late on his rent last month and hasn't paid it yet this month. His phone is disconnected and I'm in another state. How soon can I send him an eviction notice. I'm not familiar with this process as I've never had a tenant do this before. What is the procedure, costs, time lines, etc. I know I must do everything legally to protect myself.
Thank you so much for your help. Vonda Richardson
A:
For starters, you've waited long enough- START THE EVICTION- but you may need local counsel. If you're new to this, I don't recommend you do your first eviction by yourself- there's too many technicalities in the court process.
Dear Mr. Reno:
I have a situation whereby a previous tenant left furniture behind, when he moved. Never came to pick it up. Unable to reach him. I asked the current tenant not to damage it and to keep it covered until I could reach the owner. The current tenant stated that he reached him and that he gave the furniture to him. Stated that he has sold previous tenants furniture. The previous tenant owed me money for rent, and I told the current owner that I would have to check his story out, but unable to do so, due to inability to reach the previous owner of the furniture.
What's my best way to approach, my current tenant with this delima. The owner is not to be found, and I've stored his furniture for several months. I can't prove that the furniture owner did or did not give the furniture to my current renter!
Do I have an legal recourse to recover the funds from the sale of the furniture, from my current tenant?
Thank you for your time and consideration. Joyce
A:
You're off the hook. Don't worry about the old tenant- he's abandoned the furniture. Relax
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Published 2008-11-19
Dear Mr. Reno:
We signed a lease for one year. My husband who is sixty years old just got laid off. we don't have the money or savings to stay in this house. We will have to move to Az, and in with my mom. what will they do to us? thank you!
Sophia T., California.
A:
Maybe sue you? Can you give Notice to leave January 1, 2009? Maybe they'll settle for that. Sometimes if you offer to waive security, they'll let you off the hook.
Dear Mr. Reno:
I rented my house furnished to a family for 4 years. After inspecting
the house I have noticed extensive damage to the hardwood floors -
which can only be fixed by sanding and refinishing. I also left an
oriental rug in the living room which has pet urine stains on it and
the master bedroom carpet has pink spots on a green carpet for some
sort of cleaner. The tenant is expecting a full refund of their
security deposit. How do I address the expense of the floors and
carpet???
Thanks
Kara, California
A:
California is very strict on this. If you're going to sand and refinish, do it now, TODAY. You'll need your proof of payment as an offset.
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Published 2008-11-17
Dear Mr. Reno:
My name is Blair, I live in California (San Carlos, in the bay area).
On May 25, 2008, I signed a lease agreement for six months. My lease
was set to expire November 30, 2008 at midnight. The lease box is
checked (as opposed to month-to-month rental agreement) and
specifically states verbatim: "Tenant shall vacate the premises upon
termination of this agreement unless: (i) Landlord and tenant have
extended this agreement in writing or signed a new agreement (We have
NOT done this); (ii) as mandated by local rent control law (do not
believe this applies as there is not rent control for San Carlos, CA);
(iii) Landlord accepts rent from Tenant (other than past due rent) in
which case a month-to-month tenancy shall be created....
I have not paid for any rent past November. I intended to find a new
place so that I could vacate my rental on the 30th of November. We
never signed a new agreement and that is all the lease says about the
end of the lease. There is no clause anywhere that says I must give 30
days notice before the specified termination of my lease.
So, I found a new apartment and just as a courtesy to my landlord,
told her on November 9th, 2008 that I would be moving to a new
apartment at the beginning of December. She then informed me it was
the law to provide 30 days notice no matter what. She intends to
subtract nine days of rent from December (totaling over 300 dollars).
She told me there is no such thing as a six month lease. Can you help
me clarify what is the actual law and who is right? Blair Burnette, Stanford, CA
A:
There is much disagreement on this issue. I agree with your landlord, that 30 days notice is still needed because expiration of the lease term just makes it a month to month which requires 30 days to terminate- but I've heard both versions.
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Published 2008-11-15
Dear Mr. Reno:
If my parents own a single family home that they have been renting out in California, Can they limit the number of people they would like to live in this home? It is a 3bedroom/1 bath home. A., in CA
A:
You can try putting it in the lease. Clearly state the number of people (I believe the LPA lease has a clause.) The problem: It's hard to enforce. But that's no reason not to try it.
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Published 2008-11-14
Dear Mr. Reno:
My landlord is trying to evict me based on the rent not being paid for this month (Nov). I left three message to speak with him about me having to leave the property due to financial changes and a family emergency that will make me move to Chicago to help take care of my mother. He waited till after he filed for eviction before he contacted me (the same day he filed). I have four months left on my lease (16 month agreement) and I was leaving Nov 30th. Is there anything I can do to prevent from paying the extra 322.00 in legal fees he is charging and will I be required to pay the remainder of the lease if the court rules for the eviction even though the life changing event will constitute me to leave in Dec any way? Jem in Minnesota
A:
Go to Court and talk to the lawyer- See if you can make a settlement. Sometimes they'll waive legal fees if you agree to a quick date to leave
Dear Mr. Reno:
My mother took a mortgage for a friend, it has been three years, they have not paid for 12 mths, the home is in foreclosure, but the bank is working out a deal. She wants to sue. In the state of NY is this feasible? There was no written agreement- second mistake, first was doing it. Will this be a landlord tenant thing, or another civil issue. Her credit is shot and she does not live in NY. They owe property taxes also, what can we do??
Bernalyn
A:
This is happening all over like crazy. But you can't sue. It's like two people rob a bank, and when they get caught, one sues the other. Under the law, you're just as guilty for being an accomplice. Your mother could sue her friend, but she'll be throwing good $ after bad.
Dear Mr. Reno:
Back in 1997 my wife and I Technically Leased a home with a purchase option. The intent was to buy the home in a friends name and wait until our credit was rebuilt and we could transfer it over to our names. We picked out a home and then had the builder write the purchase agreement in our friends name. Our friend went and took out a mortgage in his name. Our agreement with him was to cover all costs associated with purchase and upkeep of home. His agreement was that he was the owner in name only and wouldn’t further encumber property or do anything else with it until we could arrange our own financing. The agreement with our friend was that we could just pay off the balance of the mortgage to purchase the home.
We paid $80,000.00 dollars down and have paid all mortgage payments, property taxes and insurance on said home since 1997. Well about 1 month ago we got approved for a mortgage and began closing on the home. During the title search our closing attorney discovered that our friend has put a second mortgage on the property and it is still open. The so-called friend admitted that his business is failing and he done this out of a desperate attempt to save his auto business. We have the original $80,000 invested plus the home has appreciated another $105,000 so we stand to lose $185,000. To complicate it even further our friend is about to file bankruptcy to avoid some other debts and I assume he will have to include this property as it still has a little equity in it even after both mortgages. The property appraises for $355,000, 1st mtg bal is $151,000 and 2nd mtg bal is $160,000. What options might we have? The friend is willing to do whatever he can to fix this, however he doesn’t have any financial means available. He freely admits to everything mentioned above and says he will do so in a court of law.
I don’t want to pay $310,000 for a house that I should only have to pay $150,000 for it. Thanking you in advance for any information you may give me. Steve C, North Carolina
A:
You put the property in his name, and, unfortunately, you're pretty much stuck with the results. I wish I had an answer for you. You could sue him, but you'll just be another creditor on his bankruptcy petition. I got nothin'. Sorry.
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Published 2008-11-12
Dear Mr. Reno:
What is the law regarding tenant eviction and their possessions left behind in the apartment? If the Landlord has to store them is he responsible for the moving and storage fees? If so, for how long? Please cite me the law or Bill regarding this. I am a Realtor and would like to know the letter of the Law on this subject.
Thank You. Donna
Donna Westchester County NY
A:
It's not that simple. As far as I know, there's no "Law" or "Bill". It's what's called "Common Law" which evolves in cases. Procedures vary from county to county.
Dear Mr. Reno:
We were hit by hurricane Ike and I am currently a renter. I have roof damage and a hole in my ceiling and now there is mold. He has not fixed anything or even put a tarp on the roof. It rains in my bedroom. My question is. I am now moving out and he said he will not return my deposit or pet deposit because I have to give a 30 day written notice. Please let me now if I am obligated to have my money back due to a disaster. Lonette, Houston, Tx
A:
Go to small claims Court. Bring pictures. Also, you'll have to prove you notified him of your complaints.
Dear Mr. Reno:
I sublet a room in my 3 br apt to a young man. In his 3 month lease I list provisions against changes to the apartment without prior approval, public nuisance, noise disturbance, and illegal activities, etc.
He painted a wall without permission, installed an AC window unit without permission, mounted like 6 shelves pulled outlets out of the walls (intending to upgrade them he says) and last week while I was out of town my neighbor called the police at 6 am because he and his girlfriend got into a very loud fight and my neighbor stated that he could hear her being strangled. I talked to several other neighbors and they report having seen him behaving suspiciously in the alley, vomiting in the street and coming and going very late at night. I served him with a 3 day notice to vacate on friday because i think he is probably dealing drugs (he drives a jag and I have never seen him leave the house at normal working hours) and I believe he is smoking meth. I didn't want to list specifics in the notice because i'm afraid of him and his behavior is becoming increasingly alarming he went from respectable guy to total psycho in about a month(drug relapse?)
His credit check was pretty normal but im guessing a background check would have been a good idea cause he probably has priors. my question is its only the 9th and we paid rent on the 1st... Do I owe him any return rent since he breached the lease? I mean i dont know if i can prove what i suspect him of and hes talking about taking me to court for failure to show cause... im pretty sure hes out of his mind but should i worry?
Michelle, Huntington Beach, CA.
A:
You are technically correct, but I'd worry about getting him out first. That should be your number one priority. It sounds like your trying to terminate the 3 mos. lease before it expires, which is a tall order. If it takes giving him back the balance of the months rent, I'd do it. If you really need to hold on to that money, you may be holding onto your tenant longer than you want to.
Dear Mr. Reno:
I have a tenant who went to month to month as of November 1, 2008. He called and left me a message on 11/9/08 saying that he would be vacating as of November 31, 2008. His rent is due on the 1st of every month which he paid on 11/1/08. His lease agreement states that he is required to give a 30 day written notice due at the time rent is due. What are my options at this point? Due I keep his security deposit? Or do I take it further?
Thanks in advance, Travis Hargrove, Oklahoma
A:
You're being a stickler. You can technically keep it but you're going to wind up in Court. Why don't you just use it for damages, if any, and give him the rest? (By the way, I'm assuming he does leave 11/31 as promised. Oh and by the way, there is no 11/31!)
Dear Mr. Reno:
The city in which I own rental property has just passed an ordinance limiting the number of residential rental licenses per block in the downtown area to 25% of all housing on each block. I think the City is trying to encourage young families with children back into the core of the City, but that is not going to happen. Most likely, it will just reduce the value of each property, as the pool of buyers (less investors) will be smaller. Do you know of any other communities which may have mounted a legal challenge to such restrictions? Rebecca Wessman, Minnesota
A:
They have and they all lost. Rental Restrictions are a form of Zoning. Zoning laws have been challenged in the Supreme Court as an unconstitutional infringement on the free use of the owner's property. Unfortunately, those challenges always lose.
Dear Mr. Reno:
I wanted to rent out rooms in rental house instead of whole house.
I heard that I can write a contract with a tenant as a "guest" and not put the word tenant anywhere on contract, and won't have to go through eviction if guest doesn't pay is this true?
John Harrison, North Carolina
A:
You could try that. I've seen it done successfully, but only because the tenant believes it's enforceable. Whether or not it really is enforceable, depends on the local cops. Regardless of what your "contract" says, the longer your "guest" is living there, the less likely a cop will remove him without a court warrant of eviction.
Dear Mr. Reno:
tenants moved out with lots of damage to house not normal wear and tear and without paying last month rent. What our our options in getting out money for rent? We did not have to evict them thru court so do I take them to small clams' or is there an easier way??
LL CA
A:
Small Claims Court is where it's at for Landlords like yourself.
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Published 2008-11-10
Dear Mr. Reno:
We signed a lease agreement 3 yrs. Ago for a 1 yr lease. We were never
asked to sign a lew lease. We have given a written 30 day notice to the
landlord. They want to show the house while we are still living in it.
Do they have rights to do this since there is not a current signed
lease?
Christy Smith, Texas
A:
It goes by the lease. But the lease is expired, you say, however, the terms of the lease continue, but on a month to month basis. I guess it's time to read it.
Dear Mr. Reno:
My Question is i have a friend i let stay in my basement we agreed
she give me 250.00 a month the basement has a big family room
and two bedroom it a finnished dasement i also do laundry in the basement
but i told her that she had to move and get a real apartment because i need my space
And since then she hasn't given nothing for staying in my house it has been 3months and she said she'll move out when i give har a notice to move i have had to call the police because she hates my baughter they both got at it . get u my daughter is only 15 and the lady is 26 but i have to keep them away from each other i told her if u hate my daughter just move out its not like she give me anything for living thier what am i to do?
Lourdes Palomera, Chicago IL
A:
You charged her rent- that makes her a tenant. So you'll have to take her to landlord/tenant court and evict her like any nonpaying tenant. If the police won't help get her out, then the Court will. You'll just have to go thru the legal process. Sorry.
Dear Mr. Reno:
One of my tenants came to me yesterday with her mother & asked me to call
for them, to try to get the mother financial assistance to help pay the
rent. The single tentant is the only one on the yearly lease, which will be up
2-28-09, & I didn't know the mother was living there. The tenant said her
mother had been living there for 2 months. The mother told me she was
being treated at a mental facility & would soon be on disability. The
tenant that signed the lease has been a good tenant & has paid her rent on
time. I have been a landlord for 25 years & have never had a situation
like this. Please give me some advise. Thank you.
Carolyn Phipps, Florida
A:
Here's the deal. Having tenants with public assistance is a good way of getting your rent paid- but you have to play by their rules. Sometimes, they ask you to sign papers, and included in those papers is a special lease that you're bound by. Make sure you read it. I'm not saying don't do it, just make sure you agree with what your signing.
Dear Mr. Reno:
I recently had a tenant to move out on Sept 15th for which I did not get my keys back until the 17th so I believe the law says u still have to pay each day until the person returns the key/keys. I found even though she had moved out she did not turn in the extra keys that were copied so she was still coming in the house without my approval and took the screen off the window and the only way to get the screen off is from the inside these are brand new specially made windows and when we did our walk through with her we asked her about and she went to her car and got it out. So my question is, isn't that unlawfully breaking in the house where u used to reside w/o permission? Question 2. She had up until the end of the month to move but chose to move out sooner. This was a month to month rental. My house was left in shambles and there were lots of work that needed to be done after she moved. I still havent found a tenant. But my question is, because she chose to move out before the end of month which was plenty of time to clean and leave the house house in the same condition it was when she moved in am I entitled to pay the tenant back the last week or so in rent. I do have documents about that but would like your answer. thank you,
Sonya, California
A:
You've got a good case to keep the whole rent because she moved out in the middle of the month (It may technically be breaking & entering- but I doubt she would be prosecuted in a situation like this.) Keep the money.
***************
Published 2008-11-06
Dear Mr. Reno:
My last tenant was the worst I'd ever had in my 9 years of renting. I
finally got him out only to find he had trashed to place. Suffice to say, I
only returned $276 out of $1700 of his security with a detailed list and
explanation of the deductions. It was mailed to him certified return receipt
within 30 days and he signed for it. It's been almost 6 months now and he
has still not cashed the check. Is there a time limit he has to cash it by?
I won't call him, since I wasn't happy giving him anything at all after all
the trouble and stress he put me through. I see no point in chasing him to
pay him. I want to put a stop on the check. Do I have any legal right to do
so? Mark in New Jersey
A:
Why would you stop the check? It's his money, isn't it? If he waits too long and the bank won't clear it, that's between him and the bank. Stay out of that one.
Dear Mr. Reno:
My name is . My tenant promise me to pay the remaining $800.00 dollars rent on 15th Oct. Oct 15 come and they only pay me $500.00 and they never return my call for the $300.00. I used the court justice to submit a 5 day notice to cure or quit and same time gave them 30 days notice cause they contract expired last OCt and never answer the door or phone calls. They even have 2 dogs and contract only allowed them 1. I found out that they never pay the utilities too, The rent for Nov is due first day of the month however the expired contract
states if late in 5 days they will be charge late fee. my question are the following.
1. Can I evict them for not compying for the notice the sherriff mail them for paying the remaining balance of 300 and to remove the dog.
2. NOV 1 the rent is due but contract says if 5 days late will charge late payment fee. is failure to pay by Nov1 can be late already.
3. If I evict them for non compying with the notice serve and they havent paid the Nov rent and I will evict them Nov 4, are they still responsible to pay me the whole NOV rent
4. they never return or talk to contact me, they only use the txt msg.
Pls Help, thank you
Rolando U. from Sparks, NV
A:
1. Yes on the $ (forget the dog)
2. You have to wait until 11/6 if you want to go for the late charge.
3. Yes, you are correct.
4.(you only get 3 questions.)
Dear Mr. Reno:
I had tenants moving from a 2 bedroom unit to a 3 bedroom unit because they have a baby on the way. To ease the moving process, I gave them a key so they could store items in the garage of the new place while it was being readied, and they did. I had four contractors who also had keys at the time. I collected the keys and gave them to the tenants when they signed the new lease. They later claimed that items were missing from the garage. They did not have renters insurance. They have no proof of when the items were lost, but presumed that the workers who were doing repairs and painting took their things. I am in the awkward position of asking the contractors if they saw anything suspicious or ever left the house unsecured. I told them I would try filing a homeowners claim if they paid the deductible, even though I know that my insurance does not cover the home's contents. I haven't heard another thing about the matter. I am hoping it will blow over. Am I responsible for the stolen stuff? Charles Hill, Kansas City, MO
A:
Maybe. It sounds like you may be headed to small claims court. A judge will decide if you failed to take a minimum of safeguards to protect property you offered to store. This is why they say: "No good deed goes unpunished."
Dear Mr. Reno:
I am asking a question pertaining to a property in California.
If my tenant gave me a 30 day notice to vacate on Oct 5th 2008 and has not moved out by November 5th 2008 what legal documents do I need to serve her with and what steps should I take to have her removed from my property. Shes on a 12 month lease not set to expire until March, 1st 2009.
Regards,
LPA Member Aurelio Q., CA
A:
You probably should try the local courthouse. Usually, they give them out- or refer you to a website.
By the way- how can you break the lease? You need some reason, no? That's the whole point of the lease.
Dear Mr. Reno:
Question: Dear John, I had a new tenant move-in on the 1st of this
month. He signed a 6-month lease which includes a clause about "no
illegal activities on premises". The next day, I smelled marijuana. I
e-mailed him and told him marijuana use may void his lease; he replied
with "That may be a problem because I do love weed, etc.". What is the
quickest way to evict this tenant if he continues to use marijuana in
the apt? Any loopholes short of having to go to court, prove he uses
marijuana, have the contract voided and then pursue the 30-day notice
rule? Thank you. Michael K., Queens, NY
A:
I don't see it happening/ New York City is the most pro-tenant Court around. You're not breaking that lease unless you have videos of him murdering people and even then it's 50/50. The best you can do is send a threatening letter and wait for the lease to expire.
Dear Mr. Reno:
We rented a house in San Fernando ca for 2 1/2 years and it was foreclosed then auctioned on July 23,2008 the new owner is an investment company.
Our verbal agreement was we had 60 days to vacate the property, “but he would do what ever he could to keep us in the property for as long as possible.“ new owner went on to say that he would give us $5,000.00 out of his own pocket and would help us find a place to live and even provide us help moving”.
Our situation My husband George is disabled suffering from a rare and sever muscle disease. He was hospitalized from September 2007 through January 2008, once he was discharged he required 24 hour care and because of his deteriorating health I have taken on the reasonability of caring for him during the day and a nurse that cares for him though the night The new owner called us and asked if he could send someone from his office on Friday July 25,2008 to inspect the property (Agreed) He sent a real estate agent with potential home buyers showed up to see the house. I told the agent I hope he doesn’t do this again and she said, “ I know he’s giving you $5,000.00 to move out.”
we had a written agreement to vacate in 60 days (Sept 30th) but if out by Sept 15th , he would gives us an additional $1,000.00 and we would let him show the house with a 24 hour noticed if out on Sept 15, 2008.
Question: (Can the new owner harass us to move out sooner)? and what can I do if he has failed to give us noticed when sending someone to show the house. He also refused to give us the entire $6,000.00 I fill that our civil rights have been violated (if I can e-mail you with complete details if your interested can you advise me) Can you help us please
george santillano, CA
A:
I don't get it. You say you agreed to vacate by Sept. 30. Why are you still there? Unless I misunderstood you. Are you out? If so, why don't you just sue him for the $6000.00?
***************
Published 2008-10-31
Dear Mr. Reno:
I allowed my grandson to move into my house , to help me with my bills and we have not gotten along and he has not helped in the last couple of months . I have asked him to moved 4 times since Aug. 3 and he will not, we only had a verbal agreement how would I evict him ?
Justus
A:
I've evicted grandsons before. They seem to think their grandparents' job is to support them, for some reason. The fastest way is to treat him as a non-paying tenant- like the contribution you expected him to make to your bills could have been your rent. Evict him for nonpayment. He won't fight it.
***************
Published 2008-10-30
Dear Mr. Reno:
I'm Ramon in Georgia.I filed dispossesory papers to evict my tenants. The
husband left the wife. She finally moved out on Sept. 26 2008 and the
husband whereabouts are still unknown. She did not provide an answer to my
papers, so I dismissed the case without prejudice after she moved. My place
is trashed and I'm having to do many repairs. Can I sue her for September's
rent and the loss of rent until I can lease the place again? Can I sue for
repais, cleaning, and the removal of furniture and clothes she left behind?
Many thanks, Ramon Colvin, Georgia
A:
You can, but sooner or later, you're going to have to find her. I used to sue the tenant at the premises as the "last known address" because I didn't know where they lived. I would get a default judgment. But last time- the judge wouldn't let me sue them there because I knew they were out. But even if you get the judgment- if you can't find her- what good is it?
***************
Published 2008-10-29
Dear Mr. Reno:
I am not a property owner but I am a resident manager for a subsidized apartment complex. I have been here for a little over 2 years and know all of the tenants fairly well. A good portion of my tenants have disabilities, mental and/or physical. One tenant in particular is continually bashing the system by bombarding our tenants' bulletin board with propaganda and her own personal disagreements with the govt subsidy and such. Other tenants become disturbed and come to my office with fears of losing their subsidy or wondering if the law will soon not allow them to smoke on the property and other things that this tenant is always placing on the board. Would I be guilty of infringing freedom of speech if I took some of her things down and threw them in the trash? Can I write her up for "anything"? I'm thinking not, but she does cause anguish to other tenants, however I dont think any of them will put down on paper that she is bothering them. Do I have any recourse other than yanking down the board altogether? Bipolar, manic depressives, and those that have to keep proving they are crazy to the disability office every 6 mos are quite the chore to manage. Terri Burke, California
A:
It's very hard to police this. You let them have a bulletin board, now they're using it? By the way, it sounds like the tenant's problems are more with the government than with you. But if you're compelled to respond, post your own notice, or distribute a leaflet in response. (I wouldn't get involved, myself.)
Dear Mr. Reno:
A couple separated before lease renewal. The husband is the only one on the new lease. The wife came back and he took her in without letting me know. The wife called the cops on the husband and he is barred from entering the apartment and on top of that she changed the lock without my permission. I want her out of the apartment. What are my options? Roberto
A:
Don't get involved- just collect the rent. If the rent isn't paid- retake possession. If the rent gets paid, don't get involved. Just collect it. You can elect not to renew the lease when it's up.
Dear Mr. Reno:
When posting a 3-day notice, do you have to fill in the “proof of the service”, on the copy you post on the door and/or the copy you send in the mail?
Thank you.
Katrina Bauman, Snohomish County Public Works, Washington
A:
NO just do it on your copy.
Dear Mr. Reno:
I am a property manager and recently rented a vacation home from another PM company in California. The company took 8 weeks and many phone calls and emails to return my security deposit. Now 12 weeks later they have decided to charge my credit card an additional $300 to pay for a table to be refinished claiming I damaged it. There was no mention of this in my security deposit return. Can they #1 wait 8 weeks to return my deposit. #2 charge my credit card 12 weeks later claiming additional damage?
Thank you
Kelly Nix, California
A:
Call the credit card company. Tell them the charge was not authorized. Problem solved.
Dear Mr. Reno:
My tenant of two years moved out this summer. I withheld a portion of her security deposit because of damage to bushes in the front of my house. They were primary bushes and their destruction adversely impacted the curb appeal of my property and had to be replaced. She is demanding the money back stating that the bushes must have been diseased or that some other cause was the reason for their demise.
I have photography showing the state of the bushes before and after her tenancy. They clearly had been severely pruned. She contends that there were no specifics in the lease about landscaping. I contend that the bushes are part of the property and damages should be covered by the security deposit. The disputed cost is $625.
She is threatening to sue and in my state she would be entitled to triple damages should she win.
Please let me know your thoughts. Thanks,
Kathy
A:
First, I assume you can show "out of pocket" expenses of $625. You'll need that but know you have the lease problem. Nothing at all about landscaping? That's a problem. One second thought, that's a really big problem. I agree that it's part of the property, but the judge may not.
***************
Published 2008-10-28
Dear Mr. Reno:
MY NAME IS TIM I AM FROM N.Y. I HAVE A TENNANT THAT HAS RECENTLY MOVED OUT WITHOUT A WRITTEN 30 DAY NOTICE TO ME. (WHICH WAS IN HER LEASE) SHE ONLY PAID 270.00 OF HER 525.00 RENT SHE MOVED AND STILL HAS A POOL TABLE AND A MATTRESS IN THE HOUSE SHE SAYS THAT I HAVE TO GIVE HER 24HR NOTICE TO SHOW THE HOUSE WHICH IS FOR SALE BEFORE I CAN TAKE ANYBODY IN TO SEE IT.ALSO SHE TURNED OFF THE GAS AND ELECTRIC. I HAD TO TURN THEM BACK ON BECAUSE OF COLD WEATHER AND I WANT TO KNOW IF THAT IS ABANDONMENT.BESIDES ALL THE DAMAGE TO THE PROPERTY THAT SHE CAUSED . THANKYOU AND I HOPE YOU CAN HELP ME. PS. DO YOU KNOW A GOOD HOUSING ATTORNEY IN NIAGARA FALLS N.Y. THANKYOU TIM FOSTER
A:
Based upon what your saying, it sounds like she's out. But she still could sue and say she isn't, so it's a dilemma. The only way to really insulate yourself from her suing you is to evict her, which sounds like a waste of time and money in this case. I would retake possession now without the eviction. It's a gamble, either way, but often life is a gamble.
***************
Published 2008-10-27
Dear Mr. Reno:
The question is for a NY RENTAL. OK the
weather's getting cold - and I now know it's the legal responsiblity of the
landlord for the heater to be working, right - even if the tenant has
turned off the gas(?) and then turned it back on and can't get the furnace
to work.
I've had a heater/ plumber repairman and the prop. manager there every day
to fix it this week - since we found out it won't light - and she was given
4 "space heaters" by the heater fellow for temp help.
However - here's the best part - she is 4 months late with the rent - always
promising to make it until now when I ask for at least 1500 to get almost
caught up and be able to buy a new furnace.
She calls the city bldg inspector to complain and get my perfect little SFR
home CONDEMNED! From what my prop mang. says she's moving out tomorrow!
and glad to leave me high and dry - (even though I've been too patient with
her all this time)
I think I should just let her go - and THEN get the furnace fixed and
rerent...what do you suggest? I did call the NY Inspector this AM and
tell him the truth about this all and he said he can't advise me.
Help - from long distance landlady-
Bernice Brightbill, CA
A:
Well, you said she is 4 months late- what are you waiting for? She's also obviously a pain in the butt. Get rid of her.
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