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Landlord Advocate..
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Quick Tip:
Keep it simple
when talking about security deposits.
In the accompanying article
How a postmark can help protect you from a “professional tenant” we
described a situation where the tenant demanded the return of a security deposit. The landlord, in
return (with our advice) repeatedly and simply told the tenant that “the
security deposit would be addressed as
required by state statute”.
This
practice of keeping your
response brief, reinforces a guideline that all landlords and property managers
should remember. When speaking with a departing tenant regarding their security
deposit, less is more, because tenants – particularly, the “professional
tenants” described in
that article – will attempt to use anything you say against you.
We’ve
unfortunately found that landlords sometimes misstep in conversations with
problem tenants who are nearing the end of their tenancy
- often because they’re frustrated with
the problem tenant and want simply to finish the conversation and move on to
other things. Moreover, we’ve heard of situations where the problem tenant will
often purposely initiate a security deposit conversation - before the
final walk-through inspection – just so the landlord is deprived of the information needed
for a full and complete response on the subject.
Most often, the problem
tenant is looking for a response from the landlord along these lines: “We will
return it to you in thirty (30) days.” This response violates at least two (2)
rules:
- There is no absolute
30-day clock under the statute, and, more importantly,
-
The tenant may not be
entitled to the return of some or all
of the security deposit.
We realize that the rules
regarding the return of a resident’s security deposit are complicated
to put into practice, even though they seem simple in design. Your best defense
is to keep your responses simple, and engage with your landlord attorney should
you need help in protecting your rights
and obtaining the result you want.
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Quick Tip:
Don’t waste
your time sending tenant invoices.
Want an easy way to
eliminate a major energy drag from your monthly rent collection process?
Stop sending tenant
invoices. Not only is the effort required to generate monthly invoices
unnecessary, it may actually undermine any legal efforts you are forced to
initiate.
When you send a tenant an
invoice, you run the risk of establishing a new obligation that you must fulfill
before your tenant’s obligation to pay accrues. While I’m sure that is
certainly not what you intent, it could very well be the result.
Additionally, rent
invoices can prove to be a great defensive tool for the tenant. While he/she
still maintains an obligation to pay, the technicalities of an eviction make it
so that if you have initiated an action against the resident and THEN send them
a rent invoice, you have likely torpedoed the action you just started.
If your business model calls
for rent invoices, proceed carefully and be sure to consult your landlord
attorney to discuss the nuances you should consider when using them.
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UPCOMING LANDLORD LAW FIRM EVENTS:
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Events Page for our new, upcoming Landlord Law Firm speaking and seminar
events.
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How a simple
postmark can help protect you from a “professional tenant”.
Sadly, in today’s rental world,
there are what we refer to as “professional tenants” - the tenants who, when
enacting a defense for their noncompliance, often look for situations where it
appears that the landlord has violated
the law. Once identified, the tenant uses this claim as leverage against the
landlord in an attempt to regain possession of the unit or obtain payment of
damages caused by their actions.
However, landlords who are aware of these “professional tenants” can implement
processes to help guard against their attacks.
One simple
process we recommend is that landlords keep the envelopes in which tenants send
notes, letters, or other correspondence (along with the original correspondence
of course) to the tenant’s file in your property management system (if you’re
working in a paperless world – scan them). Why? Because while it may sound
time-consuming and annoying, retaining a postmarked
envelope can provide terrific evidence against a tenant trying to deflect
attention from their noncompliant behavior.
Let’s look
at an example involving security deposits and their return - while keeping in
mind that this rule
applies equally to just
about any tenant claim or complaint (be it about the premises condition,
personal injury or property damage suffered, maintenance requests, or default
notices to the landlord, etc.).
A client
recently evicted horrible tenants who
caused significant damage to the
premises. Nonetheless, the tenants insisted
to everyone who would listen that they had left the unit pristine, except for a
few minor items that they claimed totaled
no more than $100.00. Upon inspection, it was found that the actual damages
approached $10,000.00, or 100 times the
amount the tenant claimed.
As discussed in our August 2011 newsletter article
Security deposits - Know how to hold 'em, know how to fold 'em, landlords
must account for and/or return the security deposit within thirty (30) days of
the end of the tenancy, or fifteen (15) days after the tenant gives the landlord
a forwarding address in writing, whichever is later. The tenants, knowing that
they stood no chance to recover their security deposit on the merits, sought to
create a situation where the landlord failed
to account for the security deposit within the statutory deadline, thereby
creating a claim by the tenant against the landlord. They started
demanding the security deposit while the eviction case was still in process.
We, along
with the client, responded to the demands
by stating that the landlord would address the security deposit in compliance
with state statute, and reminded the
tenants of their statutory obligation to provide a written forwarding address.
The tenant promised to do so, but did not.
This cycle of the tenant’s demand / the landlord’s (and our
office’s) response about the requirement of a written forwarding address and /
the tenant’s promise to provide the address, repeated
itself several times as the eviction date approached. Yet, no forwarding
address ever arrived.
Why? The
tenant was trying to set-up the landlord for violation of the 30-day deadline
for the security deposit accounting – allowing the tenant the opportunity to
threaten the landlord with an action under the governing statute for double
damages (see the
August 2011 article for more on double damages). Sure enough, almost to the
day of the 30-day deadline, the tenant mailed us a written forwarding address - by a letter
dated two (2) weeks earlier. By doing so, the
tenant was attempting to have the 15-day deadline end before the 30-day
deadline, hoping that the landlord would not have sent an accounting by that
30-day deadline.
However,
by keeping the envelope along with the tenant’s letter, the landlord was
able show that the correspondence was postmarked
two (2) weeks after the date on the letter. This then allowed the landlord 15-days from (at least) the postmark
date to send the security deposit accounting, which would be more than
sufficient to address the tenant’s letter and get the accounting sent.
“Professional tenants” are a
reality. Contact your landlord attorney if you have questions or concerns about
creating and implementing processes and procedures to help protect yourself and
your operations from their tactics.
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Lease violations – Why YOU may be the
cause.
I know. That’s an awfully
bold accusation. I surely don’t mean you are explicitly telling residents not
to pay the rent or that you are giving them the green light to throw wild
parties that disrupt their neighbors. What I’m referring to is how your actions
may not only be undermining your efforts to maintain tenant compliance, but may
also be sending your residents the message that it’s OK to violate their lease.
Let’s look at the
nonpayment of rent as an example. You have a lease that each of your residents
signed that clearly spells out your expectations regarding payment of the rent.
It tells them how much to pay, when to pay, where and often how to pay. You
emphasized your company policy regarding rent payment during that same
discussion, being sure to explain your expectations and the fact that they are
subject to a financial penalty – the late fee - if it payment is not turned in
on time. Now, how is it that someone, anyone, knowing those expectations –
along with the potential consequences if they fail to meet them - would ever
consider missing a rent payment?
Well, I submit that YOU
might be unintentionally influencing their failure to meet those expectations.
It’s subtle, but it may be there. Case in point - The simple action of allowing
a resident (who may have recently lost their job) to remain in the unit despite
not having paid rent in three months, or arranging a payment schedule with a
nonpayer who’s claiming a hardship. Both actions send a message to the other
residents that you are now ignoring your previous expectations and will work
with anyone who misses a rent payment. You’ve set a new precedent that everyone
is now expecting to be applied to them.
Your actions need to stay
consistent and must reinforce the expectations outlined in that original lease.
If on the first, someone misses the rent payment, you send them a late notice.
If they don’t pay, you follow up with a phone call or two. And, then, when
those efforts fail to produce the rent, you stay late after normal office hours
and knock on their door to get the rent.
Your stance should not
weaken when faced with a tenant who presents you with only a partial payment of
rent. I know what you may be thinking. In fact, I’ve heard it at every seminar
we give and frequently hear it when someone is considering becoming part of our
firm. “It’s impossible to enforce the rules because you can’t remove someone as
long as they are paying.” There is no truth to that statement, but there
is some concern. The real truth is that it is harder, requires more work, and
will be more time consuming to remove a lease violator for something other than
failure to pay the rent. That is true. There is no getting around it.
However, not only is it possible, it happens all the time, regardless of how
miniscule the violation may seem.
You have a lease for a
reason. It contains your expectations from your legal relationship with your
residents. If they are not living up to their end of the bargain, they lose
their right to the benefit you provide under the lease. Period.
Whether the noncompliance is
rooted in the failure to pay rent, or in a behavior that violates the lease -
your conduct is the key to the equation. Are you tacitly approving the
violating conduct just by “throwing in the towel”, by ignoring it and hoping it
will go away? Maybe. The best news is that there is a really simple solution
that you have absolute control over. Change your behavior. While your
goal is to change theirs, perhaps your best chance of doing so is by changing
yours first.
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In landlording, there’s more to social media than just
being “Friends”.
It’s no secret that social
media has become a powerful tool in helping to market properties. Many of you
have, I’m sure, researched the topic or attended seminars and workshops on the
best way to deploy this incredible resource to help keep your units full and
your applications flowing. From those I know who are using this asset, I hear
incredible experiences with positive results. However, what may often be
overlooked is what social media websites may be able to tell you about current
and future tenants.
I recently met with a
potential client whose experience with social media got me to thinking. Her
situation was straight forward – a problem resident started a negative social
media campaign against her and her property over unsupported claims on how the
property was being managed. Learning of the situation, she, very smartly,
joined this social media group and began monitoring the pulse of this resident
and the community he was trying to infect. I think her wisdom was brilliant.
She proved to me that social media websites provide landlords an inside look
into the thinking and attitudes of their tenants that they might otherwise not
be privy to.
People
use social media for many things, not the least of which is to complain.
Luckily for landlords, these complaints are often detailed, specific and
publicly available for the viewing. Often, right there for the reading may be
extensive information about a potential tenant and the situation surrounding
their current or prior landlord. You may be able to glean in just a few clicks
why this individual is suddenly looking for a new place to call home. And
wouldn’t you be interested to find that there are really five people living in
one of your rented units when there are only two listed on the application?
Your existing tenant may be disclosing such information for all to read.
While there may be some
that consider this practice a form of snooping, it really amounts to nothing
more than an expansion of your duties as a landlord or property manager. You
are simply looking to verify that the information the applicant provided on
their application matches the reality that you uncover. And if you learn of
past or current tenant behaviors that may not be conducive to the overall
atmosphere of your community – all the better. Why not use every resource at
your disposal to not only test the veracity of the information provided on the
application, but also hopefully learn of other subtle, nuanced information
available on current or potential tenants?
Employers have long reviewed
information shared on social media sites to weed out potential “bad seeds”. Why
shouldn’t landlords take advantage of the same resources? There’s no question
that the practice translates into more work, but adding the extra step may be
well worth the effort. You may unearth nuggets of gold that could save you a
headache in the future.
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Accepting - and ensuring
you get to keep -
late tenant payments.
The old-saying when purchasing
real estate is “location, location, location”. Similarly, as landlord
attorneys, we often hear from our clients that the key to effective property
management is “cash flow, cash flow, cash flow.”
This
concentration on cash flow makes perfect sense, as the landlord must not only
produce a solid rate of return for the property owner, but must also address the
daily financial demands of property management, maintenance, and repair - as
well as having something to put aside for long-term capital improvements. Not
an easy task.
Nonetheless, our new
landlord clients often report that they repeatedly chase tenants for the rent
payment, only to then reject the same payment once legal action is
initiated. This surprises us, as it undermines this cash flow philosophy. When
we delve into the situation further with the client, we learn that the decision
resulted from misguided (or simply incorrect) legal advice that they had
received from a previous attorney. Usually, it goes
something like this: “I was told that I cannot accept any payments after service
of the notice to quit.” Not so. However, there are conditions that must first
be met.
There are two (2) key actions
landlords can take to ensure they collect – and get to keep - every dollar
they’re entitled to – whether it’s received
before or after legal actions have started:
-
First,
they can return to the basic goal – full units with compliant tenants
paying the rent on time and in full – and ask themselves whether
“chasing” the tenant for rent payment is reinforcing the tenant behavior
they want (payment of rent) or facilitating the tenant’s bad behavior
(tenants learn that rent payment deadlines are unimportant, as the landlord
will simply keep following-up for payment). The plan to follow is simple -
make sure payment is received when
payment is due.
However, while a good landlord attorney will assist their clients in
obtaining compliance and cash flow from the tenants (thus minimizing the need for legal action), there will always be tenants who
will not comply or pay the rent – for whatever reason – no matter how well
the landlord has designed and
implemented its operations. In this situation, landlords need
to seek their attorney’s assistance to obtain that compliance and payments
through legal action.
-
Second,
once a matter gets to the situation where it must go “legal”, the landlord
should use an attorney whose goal becomes to structure the legal action so
that the landlord can take EVERY dollar in payment from the tenant without
jeopardizing the landlord’s legal rights – whether to obtain the tenant’s
future compliance through a court-enforced
stipulated agreement, or evicting the tenant (depending on the
client’s goals). This is completely doable – do not let any attorney tell
you otherwise.
Another
misconception we often hear that effect’s a landlord’s cash flow, is that the
court’s notice to quit form must be used
to initiate legal action against a tenant. No, it does not, and it absolutely
does not protect the landlord’s objectives. Every document involved
in a summary process (eviction) action is a legal document
(regardless of whether the landlord can create and use the document himself),
and can be adjusted and drafted
by a good landlord attorney to give the landlord maximum advantage.
While every situation is
different, the general rule is that:
-
If you
are operating correctly,
-
You are being represented competently, and
-
The tenant owes you
money,
you
CAN take the payment. However, all three of those criteria must be met.
If you have concern as to whether you are meeting any one of these conditions,
find out the answer BEFORE you take the money. Failure to do so may
force you to either give back the payment and/or spend a lot of your money to
address the problem.
Contact your landlord
attorney so that you can demand that the tenant show you the money, and once you
have it - keep it.
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