You should have asked permission BEFORE you brought the boat home and you would not be in the situation you are now. BUT, you don't need to hear that now, do you?
How can the grass that the boat sits on not be dead? It has to be dead under there. Obviously the landlord thinks the boat is "UN SLIGHTLY". Your lease has been fulfilled so if the landlord wants to evict you, he can do so by serving you with a 30 day notice to vacate.
If you have been a good tenant, other than the boat, maybe he will allow you to keep the boat there until it is finished. Perhaps you should attempt making a deal with him, especially if you are a good tenant. Tell him you have no other place to take it or work on it. Give him an in writing time that you agree to have it off the property, finished or not. Then offer him a bit more rent for the problem you are causing him and agree to pay it each month until the boat is launched and gone from his yard.
Other than that, I don't have any suggestions. EXCEPT I don't know many rentals that will allow you to keep a boat on the property, ESPECIALLY a boat you are working on.........You really should make the guy a deal he can't refuse and you will both benefit. Maybe he'll even join you for a beer on the boat when it is finished.................Good Luck......
2007-04-20 12:50:00
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Depends where you live I guess. The house may be some in some sort of community that has rules. My parents live in a community that bans boats outside, but you can have it in the garage.
Best bet, talk sensibly with the landlord. See if he is getting pressure to remove it. Let him know you understand his concern but it is ALMOST done...
If he just doesn't like the look of it, well, I would say it is none of his damn business. He may be trying to sell the property (no big surprise these days), and the site of it may turn off potential buyers.
If that is the case, I would start asking some questions as to how and when he plans on paying you to vacate the premises...$$$$$$
Every city has it's own laws designed to protect renters from landlords. It is not just a matter of "I'm the landlord and I make the rules". Could you imagine how many people would be homeless, and how many landlords would be targets of retribution?
It is more of a business relationship and laws are there to protect both the landlord interests AND the tenant.
2007-04-20 12:38:56
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answer #2
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answered by Scott 2
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If it's on the property there may be city ordinances against it. Why don't you have an discussion with your landlord and work towards a resolution? Your lease probably doesn't say anything about restoring aircraft in your front yard either so keep an open mind.
I believe most courts would agree that having a boat or other items out on the property longterm constitutes a violation in keeping the property "sightly".
2007-04-20 12:45:12
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answer #3
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answered by gyrfalcon16 3
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Most residential neighborhoods have implied covenants against unsightly things like big boats or RVs or even satellite dishes, even if it's not in the lease. It's usually recorded in the County Recording office in the municipal court. If there is, then the landlord has the right to sue you for damages for having ugly things on the property. However he cannot evict you, as long as you keep paying rent. You should rent a boat slip or parking space at a marina and keep your boat there.
2007-04-20 19:29:27
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answer #4
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answered by BlueSnOw23 2
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As others have said, it depends on the lease. Additionally, if the property is in a property owners/ home owners association, most have rules against parking a boat, rv etc in a driveway for more than a few days. It could also be against local zoning rules. Ultimately, the landlord will get the fine and he has every right and duty to enforce the rules against you.
2007-04-20 14:22:15
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answer #5
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answered by plutolawyer 2
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The hire is a binding settlement that the owner won't be able to wreck basically because of the fact they pick you to flow away. although, many landlords that pick to evict a tenant could attempt to discover reasons to evict you. reasons inclusive of not conserving the valuables sparkling, having loud events and being a commonplace nuisance. on your hire there may well be countless clauses that supply the owner the surprising to evict you if particular situations stick to (study the effective print). If something, he could wait it out till your hire runs out, and he does not could renew it. whilst the owner is showing the valuables to finding for what you supply, ask the clientele or the owner in the event that they are planing on evicting all the tenants or if the recent potential vendors might pick to have you ever as a tenant, it does not injury to ask. i understand approximately evictions because of the fact i'm a Deputy who works in the civil technique workplace.
2016-10-13 01:48:35
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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I doubt that he'll try to evict you before the lease is up. If he does, take pictures of the property so you can show that it is in good order. In fact, I'd be careful to keep it that way so he can't catch it on a bad day and take photos himself.
My guess is that, when your lease is up, you're gone. You might want to start scoping out a place a couple of months before.
2007-04-20 12:34:46
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answer #7
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answered by Terri J 7
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What does your lease say about boat storage? If it says nothing then the landlord has no legal reason to evict you. But just to make sure, pay a consultation fee and ask a lawyer.
2007-04-20 12:35:58
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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It depends on "How the wording" in your lease is stated. If it was Me. My first call would be an attorney.
2007-04-20 12:37:35
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answer #9
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answered by Old Dawg 5
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Okay..NOAH..ya got some inside info on the next flood? Ya havent started loading the animals yet ...have ya?
2007-04-20 12:42:43
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answer #10
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answered by Luke 3
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