English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

We recently moved into a house and received our first water bill. It was for $600.00 for 2 months. We called the landlord and she sent a repair man out to fix the problem. He had to replace 2 valves and completely turn off one section of the yard. There were at least 3 leaking sprinklers. The main leak was hidden under vines, so we didn't even know about it. I called the water company and took off $260.00, but we are stuck with the remaining part of the bill. Should we have to pay all that amount or should the landlord have to help us with the bill. We did not break anything, it was already a problem when we moved in. The water company said they had been averaging the water bills in our area that is why it was not caught sooner. Thanks

2006-12-21 06:49:09 · 11 answers · asked by melissa E 1 in Home & Garden Maintenance & Repairs

11 answers

the landloard is responsable

2006-12-21 06:52:00 · answer #1 · answered by aussie 6 · 0 0

easy answer would be landlord. doesnt always work that way tho. I would say you can get them to pay since the system was broke and they "repaired" it. I think you need to keep track of the day they repaired it and who did it. taking money off the rent doesnt hold up in court, the landlord will win in those cases. if you have the same weather during the next water bill and dont change the way you do things... i would ask for the difference between the new "normal" water bill and the other.

2006-12-21 09:47:49 · answer #2 · answered by hometech02 3 · 0 0

That's a great question. You might end up seeing a lawyer over that one to get resolution for your state/municipality, whatever. I'm a landlord. If it was me, just for good will since you just moved there, I'd split the remainder of the bill with you, which would be $270 each. Honestly, there is probably SOME culpability on your part for not noticing how damp your property was. If you haven't gotten into an argument with your landlord over this yet, I'd NICELY ask them if they would split the remainder of the bill with you. As a landlord, I would, but that might not happen for you. Good luck.

2006-12-21 07:00:33 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you're in a real gray section right here. i've got been a supplies supervisor and the water bill is a negotiable merchandise. some tenants pay it, some do no longer. first element is you could't be evicted without going to Landlords - Tenants court docket, so which you would be able to have a huge gamble to describe your subject in front of a choose and / or a mediator. Now if the addendum is signed by ability of the two you and the administration company then this is as binding because of the fact the lease this is related to. in the event that they only despatched you a be conscious after the lease became signed and you probably did no longer sign it (the meant addendum) then that's not binding. next you're saying the addendum states the the utilities would be on your call. meaning you get the bill and not the owner. for the reason that that hasn't been executed yet i'm undecided the addendum could be binding thus. a minimum of no longer until the water bill is on your call and the bill is deliver to you. while you're to blame then you definitely would desire to be getting the bill in basic terms the comparable as your gas, electric powered or cable bill. right here i could would desire to ask in case you somewhat have a committed water meter to your house of living. as an occasion you reside in a duplex or distinctive unit construction yet there is in basic terms one water meter for the construction -properly there is not any precise way of telling who used how plenty water. If there is not any committed meter to your house of living then i do no longer think of this addendum could be enforced until that occurs. in the event that they decline the lease you would be able to desire to flow to the economic business enterprise and open a separate account (ideally an escrow account) and placed the lease in that account. If this is going to court docket (and believe me the owner hardly needs to flow there) you have evidence which you have placed the lease money away in sturdy faith and could pay it on the spot whilst this concern is settled. additionally it might desire to take months until you could now get a court docket date. in case you have the money in an account you could't be accused of non-charge. make certain to shop each scarp of paper the owner sends you. Make copies of each thing you deliver them and use qualified mail to your documents. as quickly as returned this is an exceedingly gray section and that's not sparkling decrease who's suited right here. State regulations selection and a few minor element or small word on your lease could make all the version in who would desire to pay this bill. sturdy success.

2016-12-11 13:46:14 · answer #4 · answered by slagle 4 · 0 0

I would definitely approach the landlord. Since the problem existed before you moved in and you did not cause the valves to leak, he should take care of it. It would be the right thing to do.

2006-12-21 06:56:08 · answer #5 · answered by eskie lover 7 · 0 0

The landlord rented to you a faulty water system, that he should have known about. You should not be responsible for the water bill. However, if he insists on you paying for it, deduct it from the upcoming rent.

2006-12-21 06:57:51 · answer #6 · answered by mrjrpadilla 3 · 0 0

The landlord should pay anything previous to your move in and thank you for spotting the problem.

2006-12-21 06:56:52 · answer #7 · answered by Tapestry6 7 · 0 0

I think the landlord should help you pay it because when you got to that house it was like that

2006-12-21 06:55:52 · answer #8 · answered by â?¥â?¢*¸â?¥ Killa â?¥ â?¢*¸â?¥ [ Ruby] 2 · 0 0

If you have a formal Lease, check it. It will tell you who is responsible for which damages may occur. Some damage may be for the landlord to pay and some may be for the tenant to pay.

2006-12-21 11:30:54 · answer #9 · answered by intrepid 5 · 0 0

land lords pipe landlords bill get a lawyer

2006-12-21 13:32:01 · answer #10 · answered by hill bill y 6 · 0 0

No you should give the bill to the land lord!

2006-12-21 06:54:34 · answer #11 · answered by kim806 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers