1) call the landlord and let him know of the situation
2) do not give out the landlord's address under any circumstances - if you do this may come back to haunt you
good luck. none of this is your problem really. so don't let anyone make it your problem. you are the tenant, you don't pay his bills nor are you his secretary.
good luck
2007-01-25 08:37:03
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Your landlord contracted the plumber to do work, you just happen to be the person who lives where the work is being done. Unless your lease says otherwise, you have no responsibility to track down the landlord for the plumber. If the plumber does not have the proper contact information for the landlord, that is his problem, not yours. You would be better to keep out of this situation. If the plumber contacts you again, nicely tell him that you did not hire him and therefore it is not your responsibility to provide payment from the landlord who hired him.
2007-01-25 04:03:12
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answer #2
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answered by crispy critter 2
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The landlord gave the plumber your phone number and their information is public record. Give the plumber the names and phone numbers. Eventually if payment is not made the landlords will be contacted in a way that may not prefer. All property ownerships are public record and therefore don't fall under privacy act.
2007-01-25 05:08:44
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answer #3
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answered by dancing11freak 2
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You are a tenant. Did you call the plumber? No. You only let him in - or gave permission to - according to the landlord's instructions to him. You knew nothing about it.
He should go there to collect. Just stay mum. You do not want to be party to their dispute. Plumber should know where the order came from. That's where he goes to collect. That's what I will do.
Dispute? Throw the rule book at the plumber. The landlord/tenant act to the aid.
2007-01-25 04:18:53
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answer #4
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answered by Nightrider 7
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Go ahead and give all the contact info for the landlords. Then politely request that the plumber stop contacting you, since it's not your responsibility.
2007-01-25 03:52:41
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answer #5
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answered by Uther Aurelianus 6
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Send a letter to your landlord and his brother (since it is a partnership) that the plumber is requesting their information and that if you do not hear back from them by mid-February, you will provide their information to the plumber.
I think that should be fair enough warning.
2007-01-25 03:52:13
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answer #6
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answered by Developing Minds 3
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It is not your responsibility. It would be nice of you to give further information so they can collect payment. But you are right, it is plumber's responsibility to find out billing information before doing work.
2007-01-25 04:00:59
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answer #7
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answered by Kabu 5
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searching at a leaky air conditioner does no longer sound like that's contained in the scope of "plumbing". at the same time as doing plumbing artwork calls for a license, engaged on an air conditioner would no longer relying on the State the position you stay. once you've renters coverage use it and ignore about court docket. you would possibly want to many times ought to pay decrease back the coverage agency what they paid out depending on what's noted in criminal jargon as their subrogation rights. Your state would also no longer enable fix of losses premised on emotional misery or different non tangible form losses. once you have not any coverage and the guy who did the artwork is of small economic ability (that could be ordinary), your maximum acceptable wager is to sue the owner claiming that the guy who broke the pipe become an worker of the owner. If an worker, then the owner is accountable as long as you may coach that the worker become in reality negligent. do no longer assume you would possibly want to attempt this merely because the pipe broke. you nonetheless ought to exhibit that he did some thing careless causing the pipe to break. the incontrovertible actuality that the pipe broke does no longer unavoidably without delay coach carelessness or negligence. as well, many states, which includes the only I stay in, received't carry a landlord responsible for the misdeeds of an self reliant contractor. you want to benefit your state's regulation in this. i might want to also recommend thoroughly interpreting the owner tenant regulations on your state. they are many times chanced on all in a unmarried area of the code books.
2016-12-03 01:01:25
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answer #8
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answered by ? 4
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this is between the plumber and the land lord just stay out of it
2007-01-25 13:47:17
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answer #9
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answered by darthdread13 3
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