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What would be the Process to suing my landlord? What would you have to do? Would a lawyer take a case like this? I live in a apartment building, there is only one way to get in and out of the apartment building. There used to be two post to hold on to. but one of them has been broken since August of 2006. The landlord come here all the time and dont fix it. He just leave it. Right now it is winter and there is alot of snow and ice at times, but it hard sometimes to walk up and down on these steps, and than one of the post missing, you dont have any support. If someone was to slip and fall , hurt there back or even broke a bone. Due to the negligance of the landlord. Could you sue him for pain and suffering and stuff? What would be the proper steps in filing a lawsuit? What are somethings I would need to prove my case and win? I live in New York

2007-01-26 21:02:38 · 5 answers · asked by pnkrockerkid 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

5 answers

I hope this helps b/c I have been through alot with my landlords first of all do you have a company called landlord and tenant act that is the first people you need to call and take a picture of the post and stairs with the ice and snow on it. Get your neighbours in your apart. to sign a petition against the landlord he will have to fix the post b/c if anyone gets hurt it will be his fault and he will likely be sued. Hope it turns out.

2007-02-03 16:23:51 · answer #1 · answered by sweetpea 4 · 0 0

First, there is not any insurance you should bypass. there is each and every probability that the recent proprietor will proceed to employ to you - extraordinarily if the recent proprietor is a economic corporation (better to have some income coming in even if you intend on promoting). second, you could't sue until eventually you bypass and also you aren't getting the deposit lower back - see you later as you stay interior the condominium, the deposit is a valid deposit and also you've were given no criminal declare on it. once you bypass, the owner many times has 30 days to go back the deposit. of direction, once you do bypass and performance a precise to have the deposit lower back, small claims is the position to bypass because you do not go with a criminal specialist (remember to operate in court prices). of direction, you should settle for pennies on the dollar interior the destiny if the former landlord is going bankrupt/broke.

2016-10-16 04:16:40 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Get out of there. Get another apartment. Work on something useful in life.

Take a good look around you. See those people with money and good jobs. You think they monkey around with such nonsene as is the case here. NO NO they occupy their lives with useful productive hours and if an apartment isnt suitable they move out.

2007-01-26 21:15:22 · answer #3 · answered by James M 6 · 1 0

You might talk with legal aid, they deal with landlord-tennant disputes and can give you further advice.

2007-01-26 21:21:41 · answer #4 · answered by scott p 6 · 0 0

Before you jump the gun, find out what the laws say about your situation. One key thing i always say to renters is, HAVE AN WRITTEN AGREEMENT!

2007-02-02 09:40:24 · answer #5 · answered by Bobby B 1 · 0 0

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