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I applied for an apartment and the application specifically stated that if I paid the application fee, the administrative fee and the deposit, the apartment would be taken off the market. It specifically outlined and stated the apartment #, the move in date and the agreed rental rate. The following day I get a call from the apartment complex asking me if I could move in on an earlier date than the agreed move in date because they really need to rent the apartment out at an earlier date. I stated no because I and the leasing agent signed the application that agreed to those terms. I also paid the required monies to take the aparment off the market. Then on the following day, the leasing agent calls and states that the present tenants are not going to move out. So now I am out the application fee and the deposit. I don't think the leasing agent should have given me the impression that the apt was available if that was not the case...so what recourse do I have now? Anybody?

2007-10-02 13:38:50 · 5 answers · asked by ylrsat 1 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

5 answers

unfortunately, that happens alot to landlords. A tenant will give 30 day notice, the landlord advertises and even gets a renter, then the tenant changes his/her mind. This is not the fault of the landlord and because the tenant already has had possession of the apt and wants to remain, the landlord cannot do anything about it. However, the landlord can give you back your deposit. An application fee is non refundable usually. I am not sure what an administration fee is, so I am assuming you are dealing with an apartment complex. If he has another apt, he can give that to you in place of the other, for the same price. Move in there. If there are no other apts, then as I said, the deposit should be returned to you.

2007-10-02 14:10:04 · answer #1 · answered by kimmamarie 5 · 0 0

Lying on a apartment program can get you denied. I paintings in estate leadership and as a usual rule, if I see an deal with of an rental, I will name them for a reference. It's going to elevate a pink flag if you happen to depart it off and the owner sees it and he would begin to impeach you and what you're hiding. You MIGHT be competent to get a written declaration out of your earlier landlord announcing that you are making repayments and simply check out the coverage that honesty is nice. I might now not recommend you to fib for your program ** To the poster that says she is looking BS on me calling earlier addresses. I do that if it is indexed as an rental. It's now not precisely rocket technology to determine which addresses belong to which rental groups, primarily if you understand your festival. I do not reside within the greatest locations, so why is it so difficult to appreciate a avenue deal with and correlate it to a group? It has labored to my improvement a couple of instances calling earlier addresses considering the fact that lamentably folks will attempt to get one over on you and if they have left an additional group with an unpaid steadiness, there is a well probability that they're going to do it to you as good.

2016-09-05 15:30:40 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

They told you that hoping you will take another unit that is available closer to your move in date. Owning property is a for-profit business. If they are looking at vacancy loss between when the old tenants move out and a new tenant can move in, they are going to want that to be as few days as possible because every day that unit is empty it is costing them money. They want to rent that unit out sooner and have you take a different unit that will come up later, closer to your move in time.

2007-10-02 15:34:30 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

At most you're probably entitled to a refund of any money you paid. It might be possible to sue for specific performance but the costs and hassle of doing that probably won't be worth the effort.

2007-10-02 14:07:39 · answer #4 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 0 0

Rent To Own Home - http://RentToOwnHome.uzaev.com/?KKMW

2016-07-12 05:01:58 · answer #5 · answered by Daniel 3 · 0 0

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