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#236727 - 07/08/08 12:49 AM
Problem Tenants
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Veteran Member
Registered: 12/28/06
Posts: 806
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I have tenants in building that have been fine to deal with until now. Now in the summer months, they are up till all hours drinking and swearing to the yard. They pay early and have not caused any other problems yet. They appear to be having some domestic issue. The brother of one tenant moved in. He clearly has a drinking problem. I see him drink in the morning, afternoon, evening. He is always polite when I encounter him but he is the source of the friction at the property. The late nights can not continue, it is disturbing others. So, approach the orginal tenants and tell the he has go or tell them they all have to go?
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#236731 - 07/08/08 01:21 AM
Re: Problem Tenants
[Re: MArealtor]
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Junior Member
Registered: 07/07/08
Posts: 6
Loc: Raleigh, NC
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Send them a letter outlining these concerns and asking for them to correct the offensive behavior immediately.
Make sure your tenants understand that what is going on at the property will result in an eviction if it continues.
Also it is not really your business how much your tenants drink. It only becomes a concern when it is a disturbance or the property is being damaged or neglected. Most renters do not expect their landlord to be involved in their lifestyle choices.
Hopefully the original tenants can work with the brother to resolve this without you losing an otherwise good set of renters.
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#241735 - 08/01/08 02:30 PM
Re: Problem Tenants
[Re: Greg Phillips]
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Veteran Member
Registered: 07/31/08
Posts: 926
Loc: SW Okla
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Our lease specifically lists the number of adults and children permitted in each unit, and then has space to fill in the number of each that will actually be residing. Lease clearly states that friends and relatives may visit overnight, but anyone staying more than 7 days 1) must be approved in writing; 2) must be added to the lease; and 3) a rent increase will occur immediately.
I had to go to that because of the type of problem you described! I've also had to define "living here" vs. "staying here" for a couple of people to get them to move along. Good luck!
_________________________
Remodeling houses & helping tenants get ahead in life since 1983. Licensed Realtor since 2005. Addicted to BPOs and working to expand.
LIMITATIONS: Until You Spread Your Wings, You'll Have No Idea How Far You Can Walk. - despair.com
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#273223 - 02/03/09 05:10 AM
Re: Problem Tenants
[Re: barb43]
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Junior Member
Registered: 02/03/09
Posts: 1
Loc: Illinois
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We had super nice tenants living on our farmette surrounded by 12 acres of nature. All was fine until their cousin Junior moved up from Arkansas to try to get work up here. Even he was great, not the sharpest knife in drawer but very helpful. Would help my Dad fix his tractor and whatever. Only later did we find out that Juniors motivation was staying ahead of the cops that were getting ready to nail him in AR. Seems he was a serial rapist and the AR authorities were just waiting for the opportune time to bring him in when he slipped away. Life was great with 27 year old Uncle Junior babysitting the tenants granddaughters. One day he started bawling to his auntie like a baby saying he wanted to go back to AR because he missed his mom. She drove him all through the night down there. When she returned back the next evening, she learned that Uncle Junior had raped both her young granddaughters. Things caught up and he is serving 7-10 in the AR state pen.
The good tenants moved out and rerented it to yet another criminal family, a child abuser under false identity who had kidnapped her non custodial children.
Since then I dont care much for multi-adult tenancies. It also puts our property at great risk not knowing who is on it at any given time.
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#273233 - 02/03/09 07:26 AM
Re: Problem Tenants
[Re: statelinebroker]
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Major Contributor
Registered: 11/02/07
Posts: 1726
Loc: Central New York
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A friend of mine has a problem tenant right now. A 72-year-old woman who has more belongings than can fit into the studio apartment she JUST rented. Her excess belongings are piled on the porch, also in the interior hall, which needs to be kept clear as another tenant who lives downstairs is in frail health and there's always the possibility she may need to be taken to the hospital in an ambulance. The new tenant's turning out to be a beligerant person, practically accosting the other tenants in the building and refusing to move the excess items into storage. The owner lives out of town.
Obviously this tenant needs to be relocated asap. Owner has not deposited the checks received for the rent and security deposit, nor were rental documents signed with the tenant.
Does this mean no landlord/tenant relationship exists? Any advice welcome.
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#273246 - 02/03/09 08:28 AM
Re: Problem Tenants
[Re: allREOpreserv]
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Major Contributor
Registered: 11/02/07
Posts: 1726
Loc: Central New York
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My friend does not want her as a tenant, as he is being informed she has been a problem wherever she has been. I believe she was evicted from her prior apartment, possibly because of her confrontational attitude. This seems to be her history...I'm sure we don't know the whole story at this point, but it doesn't look good from what we've been told.
I have advised him to contact our local Office for the Aging, also Social Services. I think she used most of her available money to move in. He would be more than glad to give her back her money and assist her in relocating. Don't know who would take her in, is the problem right now.
I think he was over-anxious to get this unit rented, as it has been vacant several months, and it's not making him any money. I don't think he made any screening phone calls...just went with it. Unfortuately, I have a role here also, as I showed her the unit, and my radar should have picked up on her unsuitability, but didn't.
Thanks for responding, Linda.
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#273269 - 02/03/09 09:54 AM
Re: Problem Tenants
[Re: allREOpreserv]
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Major Contributor
Registered: 11/02/07
Posts: 1726
Loc: Central New York
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Linda, she probably would like a little place that gave her some distance from her neighbors. Even more, the neighbors would like a little distance from her!!!
Last night I had a phone call from one of the other neighbors, accusing said newbie of dump picking with a grocery cart (she doesn't drive) and adding even more to the pile of stuff she is compiling. To my knowlege, she was using the grocery cart to move in her clothing.
Is there such a thing as a compassionate eviction? We are trying to enlist the assistance of a senior housing organization to help her get into alternate housing.
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#273388 - 02/03/09 04:08 PM
Re: Problem Tenants
[Re: allREOpreserv]
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Major Contributor
Registered: 11/02/07
Posts: 1726
Loc: Central New York
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Well, it sounds like the friend will pay to move her to a new place (if we can find one that will take her) and will pay to have her excess belongings removed to a storage facility. One of the other tenants is also elderly, and the excess stuff is blocking her front door. She is concerned because twice since she's lived there, she's been taken to the hospital by ambulance, and they won't come get her if she needs them with all that stuff in the way.
Part of my day today has been arranging for a truck that will take the stuff to storage. A police officer will supervise the transfer of goods. It's a codes violation for her belongings to be blocking the entrance. A senior housing expert has been enlisted to help.
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#275003 - 02/10/09 09:27 PM
Re: Problem Tenants
[Re: VernalUtah]
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Member
Registered: 08/03/07
Posts: 72
Loc: Minneapolis, MN
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Good to hear that it worked out well.
_________________________
Scott FicekRealtor/Investor RE/MAX Advantage Plus cell: 612-281-5419 office: 952-898-5800 Saint Paul HousesMN MLS
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#275114 - 02/11/09 12:24 PM
Re: Problem Tenants
[Re: ScottFicek]
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Major Contributor
Registered: 11/02/07
Posts: 1726
Loc: Central New York
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Checking with past landlords is no guarantee of being told the truth. Some landlords lie in order to get rid of bad tenants.
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