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7 answers

I will answer in the context of my laws for my state in my country.
No, you have no right to collect someone elses debt on their behalf without their permisssion. You continue to pay your obligation and you lodge your grievience with the tenancy tribunal. You do it this way and you will look good to any tribunal whereas your landlord will look bad. You do it your way and the landlord will be able to claim you are unreliable and that the water heater may not have been broken or that you didn't inform him. Stories like this will be easier to believe if your rent paying has become unreliable.

2006-08-30 00:02:38 · answer #1 · answered by slatibartfast 3 · 0 0

In AZ you can, but you have to proof that you gave the landlord notice of the problem and he did not respond in a timely manner. Your best bet is to google your state and landlord/tenant laws which should specifically address this situation.

IN AZ, it is outlined in detailed what the tenant can/cannot do when a landlord fails to respond to a problem.

When you deduct the rent, make sure to provide him a highlighted copy of the law that supports your rent deduction.

Anticipate move out problems when he tries to hold your deposit because you "didn't pay rent in full during that month".. Be ready and be prepared. Small claims has days specific to landlord issues.

IN AZ, If a landlord doesn't follow the rules, the judge will easily give the tenant "double damages". So, you have rights, but you have to exercise them.

2006-08-30 02:31:29 · answer #2 · answered by Paula M 5 · 0 0

A apartment settlement ought to state the disposition of home equipment that are interior the valuables. it is, it is going to state no count while you're offering the home equipment as area of the lease or if the tenant provides you their very very own. If no longer something is pronounced, i might think of the value of latest home equipment or maintenance to latest ones must be the accountability of the tenant. in simple terms because of the fact they'd have been there while the tenant moved in, it is a courtesy element. it is, you haven't any longer made any settlement to have the existence of home equipment join the apartment assets. So, you're no longer to blame for the maintenance or alternative of them. exceedingly in view that they never consulted you while they offered the dishwasher. you will possibly attempt calling a assets administration corporation to get their handle it. Or, get ahold of a real assets criminal expert. some hundred dollars spent for the acceptable criminal suggestion would become a good purchase interior the long-term.

2016-10-01 02:09:42 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

That depends upon state law. Some states permit this by law, such as CA, but you have to follow the rules carefully. Other states bar it by law; in that case you have to file in small claims court to get your money if the landlord refuses to reimburse you. And some states allow you to put the money in escrow at the county courthouse while the landlord makes the repairs.

Consult with an attorney or tenants' rights organization in your local area for guidance.

2006-08-29 23:50:26 · answer #4 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 0 0

Check your lease. Often times leases have a negligence clause saying that if the landlord neglects to tend to an emergency in a timely manner then you have the right to pay for it out-of-pocket and deduct it from rent. If you have no hot water, then I think it would be safe to declare that an emergency. Hopefully you've kept a record of your notification to the landlord to prove that you did in fact notify him. Make sure that clause is in your lease before you do anything though.

2006-08-30 02:34:07 · answer #5 · answered by kocon 2 · 0 0

not if you don't want an upset landlord. Talk to the landlord and find out if that's something he/she will agree to.

2006-08-29 23:50:21 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it would depend on the home owner in many cases.

2006-08-29 23:53:01 · answer #7 · answered by Lady Luck 3 · 0 0

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