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Barry is a new
landlord. He just purchased his first rental property, a tri-plex
that is across town from where he lives. He was very excited to
own a piece of investment property (remember that feeling?) and
wanted to be a good landlord. He also considered himself very
lucky that he bought a property with all three units occupied.
Great, no vacancies!
Shortly after
closing the escrow on his triplex, Barry got some telephone
calls from neighbors in the vicinity of his property. They were
complaining about the single lady in Unit A. She has guests late
at night almost every night. They felt sure she is a prostitute.
Barry contacted the local law enforcement, but was informed that
he would need further proof in order for the law enforcement to
get involved.
On the first of
the month, Barry got checks from the lady in Unit A, and the
tenant in Unit C, but no rent from Unit B. When Barry went by to
see the tenant in Unit B, and to ask why he had not paid his
rent, the neighbor informed him that the police had arrested the
tenant from Unit B last week for selling illegal drugs out of
his rental unit. This time, Barry contacted his attorney for
advice, but was disappointed to find that even though his tenant
had been arrested, Barry does not automatically regain
possession of the rental unit. Barry wrote his attorney a check
for $500 to start the eviction process for non-payment of rent.
The next month,
the tenant in Unit C complained that his unit was infested with
roaches. Being aware that the implied warranty of habitability
requires a landlord to keep a rental unit pest-free, Barry went
to inspect the property and arrange for pest control. He found
that the tenant had turned the unit into a garbage dump. The
tenant had obviously not taken out his trash in weeks; there
were piles of newspapers in every corner, and mildew in the
bathroom. No wonder he had a roach problem! Barry called for
pest control, then went back to his attorney’s office and wrote
another check!
Barry has
learned a valuable lesson about investing in rental property
– not all landlords screen tenants properly! If
you are purchasing property that is tenant-occupied, you may
want to consider making delivery of the property vacant a
condition of the close of escrow. That way, you can select your
own tenants using your own criteria. Otherwise, you may inherit
someone else’s problems!
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Landlord Liable
for Dangerous Tenant
This horror story comes from an actual court case (Rosales v.
Stewart) whereby a landlord was held liable for injuries
caused to a neighbor by his tenant. He was held liable because
the landlord knew of the tenant’s dangerous propensities and
failed to terminate the tenancy after acquiring the knowledge.
In this case, a neighbor’s child, a 10-year old boy, was killed
by a gunshot fired by the tenant. The 10-year old boy lived in
the house across the street. The landlord knew the tenant liked
to discharge firearms periodically in his back yard. The
landlord failed to evict the tenant once he found out that he
was conducting dangerous activities on the property. The court
found that the landlord was under a duty to third persons to
remove dangerous conditions on the property, even if that meant
getting rid of the tenant.
The lesson? A landlord must not allow a tenant who poses
a danger to others to remain in residence. This would apply to
a tenant who has a dog that is known to be vicious or has a
history of biting people, for example, or a tenant who is known
to be a reckless driver, as well as any tenant who poses a
danger to others in any way.
Don't ever
put an address on keys!
I employ a
number of housekeepers in my property management business. The
housekeepers are all independent contractors who work for a
number of other people as well as working for me. One of the
housekeepers had her garage broken into recently. Along with a
camera and some cleaning equipment, her box of keys to houses
she cleans on a regular basis was taken.
Fortunately for
me, none of my keys can be identified, because they all have
codes on them as opposed to addresses. The codes match an
internal system that the burglar would not be able to figure
out. However, one of the other property management companies for
whom she manages has complete addresses on all their keys, so
they got busy re-keying about 80 houses on the day after the
robbery.
The moral of
the story: Don’t ever put an address on a key! There are
lots of code systems that you can use to identify your keys.
Pick one you like and use it!
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