If your lease says the landlord pays for the water, then no.
The leak is his responsibility, he should have noticed the higher water bill coming from your apartment the first month and fixed it.
2007-03-30 15:49:13
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answer #1
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answered by daddy_bitz 2
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First of all the faucet only leaked for a week and 2 days later he came up with some water bills, I would ask him for a summary of just the water you used, if he can't come up with your usage, he has no right to blame. My toilet leaked for 3weeks before I fixed it and only brought the water bill up 40 dollars. As well as in your lease states you are are not responsible for the water. He can't just place the blame on you. Depending on what state you live in, rental lease agreements vary, does it state anywhere in your lease, if theres more water usage, you pay the difference?
2007-03-30 15:52:59
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answer #2
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answered by Francine A 2
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Check your lease. If it says that you must notify the landlord of any problems, then you have not done your duty, and would be responsible for reasonable, additional charges. Going back 2 months is unreasonable, if he only recently made the repairs (which caused the leak)
2007-03-30 15:45:18
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Normally you are only allowed a certain amount of water a month, even though the landlord pays for water, he is charged for any overages and if you are the cause of the overage, he has the right to charge you. You need to report things ASAP to your landlord, you can not dispute the bill because you admit to knowing about the needed repair. (sorry, it sucks but it's his right)
2007-03-30 15:45:57
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answer #4
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answered by Belle 2
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Crank the shutoff valves as much as you could via hand via fact one or the two are nevertheless leaking some water. The washer on the backside of the shutoff valve could be shot and you are going to be able to't do something approximately this good now. Take a pair of adjustable pliers and intently tighten basically a splash extra via turning the manage with the pliers. be careful on account that oval manage is low fee metallic. now and returned that's in simple terms sufficient to provide up the leak. If it would not, and you have get right of entry to to the plumbing below the abode close to the sink, follow the pipes down till you hit upon the subsequent valve and attempt to close it off utilising that one. the final element is to instruct the main off in case you won't be in a position to get the water to provide up.
2016-11-25 01:06:09
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answer #5
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answered by swarn 4
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It really depends on your lease, you may be responsible for the extra cost incurred as a result of the leak.
2007-03-30 15:47:16
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answer #6
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answered by msi_cord 7
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Absolutely Not!!! and don't let him scare you into thinking you are. And he will try, trust me. He has to pay that. It doesn't matter if you reported it or not, the water is on him. That is part of owning a building. Don't you dare pay that!! And don't let him scare you or talk down to you.
2007-03-30 15:48:33
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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You clearly sed it says landlord pays for water so if he didnt want to fix it on time its his own fault u should not be liable
2007-03-30 15:48:18
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answer #8
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answered by mlv52488 1
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Unless it is spelled out in your lease, I doubt he has a legal leg to stand on.
2007-03-30 15:46:42
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answer #9
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answered by Marvinator 7
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landlord needs a drug test
2007-03-30 16:40:11
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answer #10
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answered by quackpotwatcher 5
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