T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2952.1 | hamPshire | SNELL::ROBERTS | Gary | Mon Mar 07 1994 15:04 | 4 |
2952.2 | | NASZKO::MACDONALD | | Mon Mar 07 1994 15:11 | 12 |
2952.3 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Mar 07 1994 15:13 | 13 |
2952.4 | | SNELL::ROBERTS | Gary | Mon Mar 07 1994 15:28 | 5 |
2952.5 | | 2543::MOY | Michael Moy, DEC Rdb Engineering | Mon Mar 07 1994 16:01 | 10 |
2952.6 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Mon Mar 07 1994 16:31 | 16 |
2952.7 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, PATHWORKS for Windows NT | Mon Mar 07 1994 19:40 | 12 |
2952.8 | And carry a big stick... | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Tue Mar 08 1994 08:01 | 10 |
2952.9 | | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Tue Mar 08 1994 08:22 | 9 |
2952.10 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Mar 08 1994 10:06 | 2 |
2952.11 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, PATHWORKS for Windows NT | Tue Mar 08 1994 10:19 | 7 |
2952.12 | thanks for advice | STAR::ABBASI | this space for rent | Tue Mar 08 1994 14:51 | 20 |
2952.13 | | ASD::ASD::POWERS | Bill Powers ZKO3-2/Y05 | Tue Mar 08 1994 15:37 | 14 |
2952.14 | | STAR::ABBASI | this space for rent | Tue Mar 08 1994 16:36 | 17 |
2952.15 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, PATHWORKS for Windows NT | Tue Mar 08 1994 18:20 | 12 |
2952.16 | Its 5.75%, not 5%! | NAPIER::HEALEY | M&ES, MRO4, 297-2426 | Wed Mar 09 1994 08:02 | 16 |
2952.17 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Mar 09 1994 08:38 | 5 |
2952.18 | | ASD::ASD::POWERS | Bill Powers ZKO3-2/Y05 | Wed Mar 09 1994 08:41 | 17 |
2952.19 | 30 day notice for breaking Lease? | MTWASH::POWERS | | Wed Mar 09 1994 09:17 | 17 |
2952.20 | What I did ... | SRFCLB::FYFE | Never tell a dragon your real name. | Wed Mar 09 1994 09:35 | 20 |
2952.21 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Mar 09 1994 09:57 | 14 |
2952.22 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, PATHWORKS for Windows NT | Wed Mar 09 1994 10:08 | 11 |
2952.23 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Wed Mar 09 1994 10:27 | 29 |
2952.24 | | TLE::FELDMAN | Opportunities are our Future | Wed Mar 09 1994 11:52 | 23 |
2952.25 | Don't take OUR \nasser | HELIX::SONTAKKE | | Wed Mar 09 1994 12:52 | 4 |
2952.26 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, PATHWORKS for Windows NT | Wed Mar 09 1994 13:01 | 18 |
2952.27 | random thought (please ignore) | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, PATHWORKS for Windows NT | Wed Mar 09 1994 13:03 | 3 |
2952.28 | it's to their benefit not to lose your $$$'s | WECARE::GRIFFIN | | Wed Mar 09 1994 13:45 | 10 |
2952.30 | | GERBIL::DUPONT | | Wed Mar 09 1994 15:02 | 5 |
2952.31 | | TLE::FELDMAN | Opportunities are our Future | Thu Mar 10 1994 13:48 | 12 |
2952.32 | | DELNI::DISMUKE | | Thu Mar 10 1994 14:21 | 12 |
2952.33 | | SNELL::ROBERTS | c'mon Springtime | Thu Mar 10 1994 14:32 | 6 |
2952.34 | an update and possible escalation of the suitation | STAR::ABBASI | this space for rent | Thu Mar 10 1994 14:49 | 28 |
2952.35 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Mar 11 1994 14:31 | 10 |
2952.36 | | SPSEG::PLAISTED | Beware Information Superhighway road kill. | Sat Mar 12 1994 02:24 | 9 |
2952.37 | | TOOK::MORRISON | Bob M. LKG1-3/A11 226-7570 | Mon Mar 14 1994 22:36 | 8 |
2952.38 | | RTL::LINDQUIST | | Tue Mar 15 1994 07:46 | 3 |
2952.39 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Mar 16 1994 08:41 | 19 |
2952.40 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Wed Mar 16 1994 09:57 | 24 |
2952.41 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Mar 16 1994 11:47 | 24 |
2952.42 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Mar 16 1994 11:59 | 2 |
2952.43 | I'm no lawyer, but the law worked for me. | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Wed Mar 16 1994 12:26 | 35 |
2952.44 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Mar 16 1994 13:12 | 6 |
2952.45 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Mar 16 1994 13:20 | 46 |
2952.46 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Mon Mar 21 1994 10:14 | 42 |
2952.47 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Mar 21 1994 11:49 | 36 |
2952.48 | | NETRIX::michaud | %SuperMich% | Mon Mar 21 1994 12:31 | 9 |
2952.49 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Tue Mar 22 1994 09:33 | 34 |
2952.50 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Mar 22 1994 10:30 | 26 |
2952.51 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Tue Mar 22 1994 12:34 | 18 |
2952.52 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Mar 22 1994 13:27 | 21 |
2952.53 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Wed Mar 23 1994 09:14 | 5 |
2952.54 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Mar 23 1994 10:51 | 16 |
2952.55 | | WASTED::michaud | A small time (1 rental unit) landlord | Wed Mar 23 1994 11:21 | 9 |
2952.56 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Wed Mar 23 1994 12:17 | 22 |
2952.57 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Wed Mar 23 1994 12:33 | 4 |
2952.58 | | NETRIX::michaud | Mail to Jeff Michaud, LKG2-2/Q7 | Wed Mar 23 1994 12:53 | 18 |
2952.59 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Fri Mar 25 1994 09:20 | 25 |
2952.60 | ENOUGH | HELIX::SONTAKKE | | Fri Mar 25 1994 09:25 | 1 |
2952.61 | Here is the text of RSA Chapter 540 | 12368::michaud | Jon Wallace Jr. | Wed Nov 09 1994 16:07 | 667 |
2952.62 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Nov 10 1994 15:37 | 25 |
2952.63 | And here is the text of RSA Chapter 540-A | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, UC1 | Wed Nov 16 1994 18:15 | 376 |
2952.64 | problem with Royal Crest lease | BGSDEV::RAMSAY | | Mon Feb 03 1997 09:59 | 21 |
| Would anyone like to comment and/or offer suggestions on our
predicament? Our one-year lease at Royal Crest is up 2/28/96. They
are raising our rent and insisting we sign a new one-year lease. We
told them we decided to buy a place and will be moving out when we find
what we want, and that we've been looking since September. We have no
idea when we are going to move, but it is our hope within the next 2 or
3 months. They are INSISTING that we sign a lease, and since we are
planning to buy a place, they will insert in the lease a
"break-the-lease" clause requiring $200 from us upon signing the lease,
60 days' notice of our move-out date, and an additional $500 when/if we
exercise the "break-the-lease" clause.
We have paid our rent on time for the past year. I cannot imagine them
taking us to court/throwing out on the street good-paying tenants. I
think they are extremely greedy "allowing us to break the lease for a
'mere' $700."
This is unfair. They should just let us continue to live there on a
month-to-month basis. We are good tenants.
What can we do? Thanks.
|
2952.65 | Find your place, give them notice, and leave ... | BRITE::FYFE | Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. | Mon Feb 03 1997 10:19 | 22 |
|
My wife and I had had a similar problem back in 86. My wife had just signed a 1
year lease when we decided to get married. We went to the management folks and
asked them to convert the lease to a 6 month lease, which they offer, but they
refused stating the lease has been signed; live with it or pay the penalty.
I informed them that they could do as they please, that as far as I'm concerned,
they have 6 months notice, and that she will be returning the keys to them
at that time. We offered to find renters to take over the lease and a few other
things, and they basically said no way, you leave, you pay the penalty.
When the time came she turned over the keys and I moved her out. We got many
collection letters, each one more brazen than the last. While the letters got
my wife upset (which is the intent), I just laughed.
When the banks would ask about the credit report entry for this, I told them
it was a dispute with the landlord and that they will never be paid. That
explaination was enough for the banks and it has never been a problem.
Eventually the letters stopped coming.
Doug.
|
2952.66 | | LJSRV1::BOURQUARD | Deb Walz Bourquard | Mon Feb 03 1997 10:22 | 31 |
| I don't ever pretend to be a lawyer, but here's what I
think I'd do...
I'd sign the year's lease, but I'd cross out and initial the
break-the-lease clauses that they added just because you
were honest.
It's been a long time since I rented, but I "broke" 2 leases.
In both cases, the rental market was hot and the landlord had
no trouble getting a new tenant. If there are lots of vacant
apartments in your complex, you may not want to follow this
strategy.
Many apartments require 1 year leases, no exceptions. Some
apartments require a 1 year lease for the first year, then
allow tenant at will monthly. If Royal Crest requires yearly
leases, then I don't think you can force them to provide you
a tenant-at-will lease just because you've been excellent tenants.
But you may want to try writing letters to Flatley stating your
case. Exceptions are always possible, though perhaps not by
working through your on-site rental office.
It is my belief that, if you break the lease and the landlord
is unable to rent your apartment, then you are responsible for
the rent for the remainder of your lease. If your lease has a
"no sublets allowed" clause then you cannot legally find a renter
on your own (at least not having them pay you the rent).
Good luck. There's bound to be more advice -- renters who buy
almost always have this situation!
|
2952.67 | Try looking from the other side of the fence | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Feb 03 1997 10:43 | 24 |
| Having been on both sides of this fence, I think I can understand
both positions. The hard part for the owner about this is that you cannot
provide them with a move out date.
On a smaller scale, this becomes more of an issue as the owner
can't really actively pursue looking for a new tenant until they know for
sure when the property will be available. Try putting yourself in the
owners shoes if you can. It's from this point of view that you may be
able to negotiate with them.
Although you are good tenants, the owner has no clue whether
you'll be there for a month or two, or maybe even close to another
year. If you were staying, your rent would go up anyway, so be prepared
to have to pay the increase either way.
If you do try to negotiate directly with the owner, expect to have
a move out date you can provide them with. If after this time, they
have no new tenant waiting to move in, you may be able to work out
something where you can stay until one is found, and then agree to move
out within a month, but that's iffy. Your basically asking the owner to
risk losing a potential one year lease based on your being good tenants
and you're not willing to offer any compensation for the risk.
Ray
|
2952.68 | You might find it cheaper/easier to move | HAZMAT::WEIER | | Mon Feb 03 1997 12:51 | 21 |
| I second trying to call Flatley, or work it directly with the owner.
You know that they've had trouble renting those apts, so you NOT being
there is going to do them more harm than you being there for "only 4
mos" (or whatever).
They should be willing to provide a 60-day-notice lease. I wouldn't
argue it with the person at the rental office - they can't usually do
anything special, and some of them are REAL anal about the rules, and
won't even try.
$700.00 to break the lease seems like a *LOT*. You could have all your
stuff moved (by a moving company) into a CHEAPER apt for less than
$700.00 and get a 30-60-90-day lease. I believe that Woodlands (right
across from DEC) offers a 2br, incl ht/hw, 30-day lease for ~$600/mo.
I certainly wouldn't hand out $700.00 for "nothing". You're trying to
tell them right NOW that you won't be staying a year, and they're not
willing to work with you at all.
Good Luck!
Patty
|
2952.69 | Thank you! | BGSDEV::RAMSAY | | Mon Feb 03 1997 12:56 | 5 |
| Thanks, everyone, for your suggestions and input. It is much
appreciated. I had guessed a lot of people have had run-ins with
Flatley!
Please keep those replies coming if you have something to add.
|
2952.70 | | NETCAD::MORRISON | Bob M. LKG2-A/R5 226-7570 | Mon Feb 03 1997 13:05 | 9 |
| I think in the current climate (heavy demand for apartments) it would
probably be worth the risk to stay on without the "short timer" clause.
What would probably happen when you move out is that the landlord would
quickly re-rent the apartment and your penalty would be much less than the
$700 charge for a "short timer" lease. (That is my expression; I don't know
what the professionals call such a lease.)
Unfortunately, for a large impersonal company such as this, having been a
"good tenant" for a year doesn't carry much weight. This is one of several
reasons why I prefer to rent from "mom and pop" landlords.
|
2952.71 | | NETCAD::MORRISON | Bob M. LKG2-A/R5 226-7570 | Mon Feb 03 1997 13:15 | 6 |
| .4 was posted while I was writing .5. If Flatley is really having trouble
renting these apartments, it might not be worth the risk to renew as a
standard lease and then break it.
It sounds like a vicious circle here: Flatley is losing money due to the
vacancies and is trying to recoup part of the loss by charging higher fees,
which discourages people from moving in.
|
2952.72 | | BGSDEV::RAMSAY | | Mon Feb 03 1997 13:41 | 1 |
| .7 Bob -- you've got it!
|
2952.73 | After a year of steady payments, you deserve a little respect. | BRITE::FYFE | Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. | Mon Feb 03 1997 14:16 | 16 |
|
You've tried to be upfront and work with them. You've offered a 60 day
notice. They simply don't want to bend and they've got you by the SH
and they know it.
You could just not sign the lease and continue the pay the rent. It's
unlikely that they will try to evict a paying tenant. Then there is the
process of eviction that gets sticky for them.
Breaking the lease may make you contractually responsible for the penalty
but what are they willing to spend to chase you down? They'll hand it off
to a collection agency which you can summarily ignore.
Don't let them treat you like a number.
Doug.
|
2952.74 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Mon Feb 03 1997 15:37 | 19 |
| >Breaking the lease may make you contractually responsible for the penalty
>but what are they willing to spend to chase you down? They'll hand it off
>to a collection agency which you can summarily ignore.
and other previous notes...
Not to be rude, but is this what we are teaching our young people
today? Its OK to break a promise as long as you don't get caught?
Or it is a big corporate entity or the government?
Where is the respect for the law and taking responsibility for your
own actions?
If they word the contract with a penalty, you are welcome not to sign
or try to change it. It is a free country.
-John
|
2952.75 | Respect don't pay the bills | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Feb 03 1997 16:42 | 29 |
| re: Mom and Pop landlord
That's what I am, and paying rent on time does mean something. However,
if my tenants did the same thing to me and couldn't provide me with a move
out date, I'd be a bit upset.
I can't actively look for a new tenant until I know when the
existing one is going to move out. Whether they paid the rent on-time
or not would have no bearing on this. Their timely rent payment isn't
going to pay my mortgage after they move out.
What "I" would be looking for is someone that could work with me.
I'd consider a lesser term lease but would need a move out date. If
that date were to come and they hadn't found anything, and I had a
tenant waiting and willing to sign a one year lease, then the choice
would either be to compensate me for the risk they're asking me to
accept (i.e. loss of a signed lease), or move out.
Does anyone think this unfair ? Just because it's a larger complex
doesn't change the principle. It's essentially the same thing. If you
want to try to do the "RIGHT" thing, call the owner directly and see if
they'd be willing to work with you (i.e. 6 month lease).
They may be a larger company, but they still have bills to pay too.
If you approach them from this angle, they may be willing to work with you.
Kind of a mutual benifit thing. Don't come at them like they somehow owe
you something, because they don't.
Ray
|
2952.76 | What do you have to lose? | HAZMAT::WEIER | | Mon Feb 03 1997 17:15 | 16 |
|
re -1 ... which is exactly why a 60-day notice should be PLENTY. That
would satisfy both parties. Have you ever TRIED to find an apt more
than ~45 days in advance?? Everyone says "Come back the beginning of
next month - we don't know anything that far in advance!", so the odds
of having someone renting, willing to wait MORE than 60 days, is slim
to none.
I was going through this last year, couldn't move till the end of Jan,
started looking in Nov, and was promptly laughed at by most people
involved.
I am still inclined to think that Flatley would work with you on this -
their vacancy rate is something like 20-30% isn't it?? That's HIGH!!
-Patty
|
2952.77 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Feb 04 1997 08:58 | 33 |
| Re .75:
> Just because it's a larger complex doesn't change the principle. It's
> essentially the same thing.
The larger complex DOES change things -- not the moral principle, but
the economic essence is changed. A larger complex CAN advertise before
it has the specific vacancy, because the complex knows it will have
SOME vacancies. Economically, the loss to a larger complex when a
lease ends early is less than the loss to a small landlord.
Furthermore, it is clear that Flatley would be lying if they said the
reason for the termination premium is compensation for the loss they
would suffer. Although .64 does not say so explicitly, it appears
Flatley offered the new lease with less than two months to go on the
old lease. They pulled the same thing with my lease renewal.
In my case, they raised the rent, delivered the new offer to me on
Friday, and asked for an answer on Monday, with about a month left on
the old lease. Fortunately, I had flexibility and found a new place --
better and cheaper -- over the weekend.
If Flatley were really concerned about the notice period and the
apartment going vacant, they would offer the new lease with much more
advance notice. Clearly, they are trying to take advantage of tenants'
immobility.
-- edp
Public key fingerprint: 8e ad 63 61 ba 0c 26 86 32 0a 7d 28 db e7 6f 75
To find PGP, read note 2688.4 in Humane::IBMPC_Shareware.
|
2952.78 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Feb 04 1997 09:52 | 4 |
| .64 Go see youself a good tenants lawyer like Margrett C. Hall in
Milford. She is very good in this sort of hurra.:]
|
2952.79 | It's not being dishonest, it's being fair. | BRITE::FYFE | Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. | Tue Feb 04 1997 09:55 | 37 |
| > Not to be rude, but is this what we are teaching our young people
> today? Its OK to break a promise as long as you don't get caught?
> Or it is a big corporate entity or the government?
It is exactly the pressure that finding a new, and presumeably temporary,
residence that puts the 600lb gorrilla in the drivers seat, and they know it.
They will loose NOTHING by extending the lease one month at a time after the
initial 1 year lease. But they have you by the SH, and they abuse that position.
By staying as month to month tenants at will with a 60 day notice the landlord
avoids the cost of preping the unit for the next tenant AND avoids a vacancy.
The 1 year lease garantees that these overhead costs are covered, after that
the rent money is gravy. The penalty to break the first year lease is to cover
these costs. There is no reason to reinstate them after the first year.
So, while I don't take the position lightly, there are times, after an honest
attempt to be reasonable is made, to worry only about yourself.
> If they word the contract with a penalty, you are welcome not to sign
> or try to change it. It is a free country.
And this should be the first attempt. If all else fails, tell them exactly
what you are going to do, and do it. They will cash your checks with or
without a lease. Continue to pay the rent while working up the management
chain until an equitable and reasonable arrangement can be agreed to.
If an alernative place of residence can be found during this period, by all
means, move.
> Where is the respect for the law and taking responsibility for your
> own actions?
Last I heard, blackmail was a bad thing ... and this situation seems to have
similar aspects.
Doug.
|
2952.80 | Playing devil's advocate | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Wed Feb 05 1997 13:09 | 27 |
| re: .77
When I talked of principle earlier, it was from a moral, not an
economic standpoint. It's easy for someone to try to justify that the big
bad management firm is trying to take advantage of them. Maybe they are,
but to coin a phase that I suspect the author of .77 is no stranger to,
"They are in business to make money, period".
People know when they sign a lease that the options at the end of the
lease are to move or renew. Whether someone's buying a house or not has
no bearing on the lease agreement. It's also not a big surprise that the
rent could be raised.
From an economic standpoint, it's easier to track the status of a
lease in a mom and pop operation. Especially if there's only one. In a
large complex, trying to track different lease lengths will be more
difficult and costly to administrate. It's easier for them to limit it
to one choice (1 year). The benefit to Flately in providing 60 day leases
is apparently not worth the hassle.
In the end, each party will do what they have to, and the courts
will decide who was "legally" right (if it makes it to court). It
certainly wouldn't hurt to document that a reasonable effort was made
to negotiate an amicable agreement in the event you do wind up in court.
That was my main point.
Ray
|
2952.81 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Feb 05 1997 13:37 | 37 |
| Re .80:
> It's easy for someone to try to justify that the big bad management
> firm is trying to take advantage of them.
What do you mean "justify"? I can prove the big bad management firm is
taking advantage of people -- its actions are inconsistent with other
motivations (such as covering costs of an empty apartment) but are
consistent with taking advantage of people. But if by "justify" you
imply an ethical justification for breaking a lease was justified, then
you are wrong -- I wrote no such thing.
If you do want to talk about principle, then let us consider this
question: A party offers you a contract. While making their offer,
they lie to you. Should the contract they offer be considered as
binding as the contract offered by an honest party?
> People know when they sign a lease that the options at the end of the
> lease are to move or renew.
People do not know when they sign a lease that the landlord will give
them at the end the option of signing a new lease with a requirement of
answering within three days.
> In a large complex, trying to track different lease lengths will be
> more difficult and costly to administrate.
Baloney. It is just as easy for them to write one termination date in
their records as it is to write any other.
-- edp
Public key fingerprint: 8e ad 63 61 ba 0c 26 86 32 0a 7d 28 db e7 6f 75
To find PGP, read note 2688.4 in Humane::IBMPC_Shareware.
|
2952.82 | | O O | | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Wed Feb 05 1997 16:55 | 29 |
| re:81
Are you saying that they raised the rent prior to the lease expiring ?
Is this the lie you alluded to ?
They can certainly ASK you to sign a new lease and ASK you to do it
in a couple days. They wanted to know ASAP if you were moving or not. If
you intended to move, you tell them that and that you're not signing a new
lease. What's to decide ? Either you're staying or your not. I see this as
a 30 day notice.
It's not unusal to want 30 days notice as to whether your moving or
not. So after you, in essence, complained that they only gave you 30 days,
then you said you found a new place and moved all within a weekend. So
what's your problem ?
And lets say that you go a year, signing 60 day leases because
you can't find a place to buy/move to. Now add a few hundred units
where a few dozen people may be doing this at any given time. How can
you not see that as more difficult and costly to administrate vs. signing
and filing one piece of paper per year, and tracking one date vs. six ?
The lease is a contract that expires. Once expired, you must sign
another for it to be legal. This is likely filed in hard copy, mailed
to a home office for signatures/approvals, electronically entered and
tracked, possibly kicking off automatic credit checks, and whatever else
they decide to do with it.
Ray
|
2952.83 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Feb 06 1997 09:09 | 72 |
| Re .82:
> Are you saying that they raised the rent prior to the lease expiring ?
> Is this the lie you alluded to ?
I described the potential lie in .77. To wit, if the landlord says the
reason for the $200 fee for the lease and the $500 fee for the early
termination and the 60 days notice is to cover their losses for the
potential vacancy, then their statement would contradict the fact that
the same landlord deliberately acts to leave themselves with a much
shorter notice and less money in the event a tenant decides not to
renew a regular lease.
If the landlord honestly were concerned with notice, they would give
the tenant renewal information further in advance. From the regular
leases, we can see that the landlord is quite capable of conducting
business without the extra $700 and without 60 days notice. So they
must have some other motive for the onerous charges. That motive is
greed -- it is taking advantage of the tenants.
> They can certainly ASK you to sign a new lease and ASK you to do it
> in a couple days.
This is irrelevant to the point I was making. Clearly, you have not
grasped the elements presented. I did not state the landlord could not
ask the tenant to sign a new lease or could not ask it to be done
within a couple of days. I did state, in contrast to your statement
about what the tenant could expect, that the tenant could not expect
the landlord to use the element of surprise. And I did state that this
tactic of the landlord demonstrates their intent and contrasts with the
terms offered in the lease with 60-day termination.
You did not answer my question. If party A lies to party B while
negotating a contract, should the contract be considered as binding on
party B as if it were offered by an honest party?
> How can you not see that as more difficult and costly to administrate
> vs. signing and filing one piece of paper per year, and tracking one
> date vs. six ?
How can you not see that it is not necessary to sign six pieces of
paper per year, only one? You don't need six 60-day leases, only one
lease just like the regular lease except it says "The tenant may move
out and stop paying rent with 60 days notice." This piece of paper has
one date when it expires, just like the regular lease. Rent is paid
monthly with this lease, just like the regular lease. The tenant will
terminate the lease once, not six times. The termination procedures
(advertising a vacancy, et cetera) will be executed one time, not six.
Let us also consider the extra $500 fee. What is the purpose of the
$500? To pay for the period the apartment may be vacant? At the
moment the special lease is being considered, the landlord is faced
with a tenant who has the option of moving out shortly, as their
regular lease expires. In this case, the landlord will have less than
60 days to find a new tenant. By signing a new lease, the tenant would
be filling the apartment for some time and agreeing in that lease to
give the landlord 60 days notice. Therefore, the landlord's situation
would improve: They currently have less than 60 days notice if the
tenant moves out but would have at least 60 days if the tenant renews.
So the landlord is NOT losing any rent or opportunity of rent by
agreeing to the new lease, so the $500 is NOT compensation for the
potential vacancy.
-- edp
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|
2952.84 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Feb 06 1997 09:13 | 7 |
| Chances of the court system holding someone to not giving 60 days
notice is unlikely to be upheld in the court systems. I have had
tenants bolt on me with nothing more than a 12 hour notice, and in the
lease it stated 30 days written. And this one sleez-oid had the gaul to
haul me in and chalange the lease and WON! I thought of apealing, but
figured to give.
|
2952.85 | Same lease, just 60-day notice. I'd move. | HAZMAT::WEIER | | Thu Feb 06 1997 12:13 | 22 |
| I agree with what EDP said as well.
I lived in a place that had a 1-yr lease. When that lease was up, they
wanted me to sign another 1-yr lease. I said "Well, I don't really
have PLANS of moving, but I'm not really willing to sign on for another
whole year. Can we do anything different?" So, they took the original
lease-form, and added a clause to the bottom of it that said that the
lease may be broken at any time, with 60-days notice from the 1st of
the month (it HAD to be the 1st, which ended up killing me, but was a
LOT better than waiting out the whole year. When I called to say I was
moving, they had to stop me and look up the lease before they'd even
continue talking. There wasn't anything "proactive" done on their part
except for the yearly renewal. This is consistent with my many many
years of leasing.
My CURRENT lease is never-ending, and only states that I must stay a
minimum of 12 mos, and give 30 days notice. My 12 mos was up last
month, and I didn't hear a word from the landlord, and don't expect to
(and I have spoken to him, so the opportunity was there).
Good Luck!
Patty
|
2952.86 | duh, huh? er um oh I got lost | BGSDEV::RAMSAY | | Thu Feb 06 1997 14:25 | 3 |
| Patty, I'm glad you're able to keep track of all this. I'm confused.
:-) *Susan*
|
2952.87 | More appropriate question | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Fri Feb 07 1997 17:18 | 25 |
| re:83
A more appropriate hypothetical question is -
A party offers you a contract. While making their offer, they lie to
you. KNOWING THIS PRIOR TO SIGNING THE CONTRACT, should you enter into
a contract with them ?
Since the penalties are part of the terms and conditions of the
contract, then you would (or should have) known about this "potential
lie" prior to signing the contract.
You knew the lease expiration date. You got upset when they
asked you 30 days prior to this date, if you could sign and return a new
lease ASAP. I don't see the "element of surprise" here. If you expected
or wanted something sooner, you could have called them.
Flately's actions convey a message that they prefer to deal
ONLY with 1 year leases. They gave no indication or impression that
they allowed any other form of lease. Certainly there are alternatives
with their ethical/financial implications, but it doesn't matter. It's
not your decision to make. It was your decision to sign the lease though.
Ray
|
2952.88 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Feb 10 1997 10:17 | 51 |
| RE .87:
> A more appropriate hypothetical question is . . . KNOWING THIS PRIOR
> TO SIGNING THE CONTRACT, should you enter into a contract with them ?
What makes that more appropriate? Your question address efficacy more
than ethics, which makes it less appropriate. Also, you are changing
the situation -- the people in the situation in .64 might not have
known the landlord were being deceitful if other information were not
brought to their attention. Please answer the question I posed in the
situation I posed.
> You knew the lease expiration date. You got upset when they asked
> you 30 days prior to this date, if you could sign and return a new
> lease ASAP.
a) I did not get upset. Please do not make up facts.
b) The request was not to return the new lease as soon as possible; the
request was to return the lease within three calendar days.
> I don't see the "element of surprise" here.
It is a surprise to be asked to do something within three days when one
had no reason to expect such a deadline. And you are still missing the
point: The issue with the short deadline is not how short it is
(although this contributes to the evidence that the landlord's intent
is to weaken the tenant's negotiating position) but that the landlord's
choice of how to handle lease renewal contrast with the terms offered
in the new lease.
The terms in the new lease suggest the landlord wishes to avoid having
little notice. The tactics of offering the renewal show the landlord
can handle little notice.
> Flately's actions convey a message that they prefer to deal ONLY with
> 1 year leases.
That hypothesis would explain the onerous terms in the new lease. It
would not explain the contrast between the long notice required in the
new lease and the short notice for the lease renewal.
-- edp
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|
2952.89 | Speaking of "irrelevant" | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Wed Feb 12 1997 17:56 | 19 |
| re:88
The "potential lie" you keep speaking of is irrelevant. The fees that
existed and the conditions they would be applied in appeared on the
contract, which you agreed to when you signed it. Are you trying to say
you or .64 weren't aware of these fees/conditions before signing ? So
whether the fees are justified or not is irrelevant. If you didn't like
them, you were welcome to go elsewhere. No matter how you word it, the
essence of your question is whether or not two wrongs make a right. My
answer is no.
Your lease was about to expire at the end of the month and you're
given 3 days to sign a new lease. What's to decide ? Either you're
staying under the new terms or you're leaving and you have a month to
find a new place and move. By giving you 3 days to decide, they have
the better part of a month to schedule a maintenance/cleaning crew into
your apartment if need be.
Ray
|
2952.90 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Feb 13 1997 08:17 | 50 |
| Re .89:
> The "potential lie" you keep speaking of is irrelevant.
I disagree. A lie can void part or all of an agreement. E.g., if
Smith tells me he has the cheapest apartment in town, and I rent from
Smith, and it turns out Brown has a cheaper apartment and Smith knew
it, then Smith is legally liable to me for the difference.
Similarly, if Smith tells me the fee is to cover Smith's expenses, and
that is not true, and Smith knows it, then Smith owes me the amount of
my damages, which a court might decide equalled the difference between
Smith's actual expenses and what Smith charged me.
> Your lease was about to expire at the end of the month and you're
> given 3 days to sign a new lease. What's to decide?
ONCE AGAIN, I have not made ANY COMPLAINT about the landlord's right to
set whatever deadline the landlord wants. Can you show ANY SENTENCE
where I wrote any such thing?
By repeating this, you have proven that you do not understand the
point. Since your understanding is at fault, nobody should give any
credence to your opinions in the matter.
Suppose a hit-and-run accident had occurred, and a witness saw that a
green car was involved. The police investigate and find out that Smith
has a green car. Combined with other facts, this demonstrates that
Smith was the hit-and-run driver.
Now, by itself, there is NOTHING WRONG with having a green car. Smith
did nothing wrong by having a green car. But the green car is EVIDENCE
of a DIFFERENT ACT.
Similarly, by itself, there is NOTHING WRONG with the landlord offering
short notice. The landlord does nothing wrong by offering short
notice. But the short notice is EVIDENCE of a DIFFERENT ACT.
The short notice is evidence that the landlord really does not need
long notice, so it would be false of them to say otherwise.
-- edp
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|
2952.91 | Spilt milk | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Thu Feb 13 1997 15:26 | 42 |
| re:90
Did they really lie ? Did they not provide you with what you
paid them for, and at the agreed upon price ? If you lived up to
your agreement would any of these fees be applied ?
The basis of the fee is to provide them with compensation for a
potential vacancy due to short notice. Regarding this "short notice"
in your own words -
> Flatley offered the new lease with less than two months to go on the
> old lease. They pulled the same thing with my lease renewal.
If the contract says that you'll give them 60 days notice if moving,
after you have less than 60 days on your lease, they can assume your
staying another term. Just in case, they'll ask you at least 30 or more
days prior to the expiration to sign a new lease. This only indicates that
they may be able to deal with 30 days notice, but they would prefer 60.
I'd say that Flately IS concerned with notice. The above reasoning
also explains the 3-day notice to sign the new lease when you didn't
contact them 60 days prior to your lease expiring. In any event, this
supposed "evidence" does not support your point.
The unwillingness to provide one with a 60 day lease also proves
nothing. As I said, maybe they prefer to deal with only 1 year leases.
From regular business, they have enough time to schedule a maintenance
crew in the day that you leave. Their actions provide them with at least
30 days notice. With proper notice, they can co-ordinate the services
needed to prep the apartment in a day, and rent it the next. If so, then
they get the maximum yearly rent out of the apartment. This, no doubt, is
the goal.
You tried to draw support for your point by saying the fee was not
required for regular business. This, and other statements you made are
based on knowledge you'd have *PRIOR* to entering into a contract with
these people. If you knew, or even suspected a "potential lie" prior to
signing the contract, why did you sign it ? The time to do something about
it was *BEFORE* you signed.
Ray
|
2952.92 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Feb 13 1997 15:34 | 39 |
| Re .91:
> Did they really lie ? Did they not provide you with what you
> paid them for, and at the agreed upon price ? If you lived up to
> your agreement would any of these fees be applied ?
In the situation under discussion, yes, yes, and yes.
> Just in case, they'll ask you at least 30 or more days prior to the
> expiration to sign a new lease.
Huh? That doesn't fit into the situation. Again you demonstrate you
do not understand the circumstances.
> The above reasoning also explains the 3-day notice to sign the new
> lease when you didn't contact them 60 days prior to your lease
> expiring.
There's nothing in the original lease about 60 days notice.
> If you knew, or even suspected a "potential lie" prior to signing
> the contract, why did you sign it ?
a) *I* did not sign any such thing.
b) If Smith tells Jones a lie and also offers Jones an agreement, Jones
is legally and ethically free to accept the agreement and hold Smith to
it. Jones is also legally and ethically right to hold Smith
accountable for Smith's lie.
-- edp
Disclaimer incorporated by reference. Send mail for copy. No
permission of any sort is granted to the moderators.
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|
2952.93 | | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Thu Feb 13 1997 17:10 | 33 |
| re:92
>> If you knew, or even suspected a "potential lie" prior to signing
>> the contract, why did you sign it ?
> a) *I* did not sign any such thing.
So the old lease YOU signed had no lies, they provided YOU with
what you paid them for, and these fees were not applied to YOU.
If by "the situation under discussion" you mean .64, you have not
proven that Flately lied, the tenants received use of the apartment for
the agreed price and duration, and the tenant will incur no penalties if
they move at the end of the lease.
You attempted to use as evidence of the lie the fact that they can
deal with a shorter notice. Then when I point out that their actions
assured them of at least 30+ days notice, you respond by saying that
doesn't fit into the situation.
I can think of at least 2 or 3 situations right off the top of my
head to support a need for more notice. Without knowing the reasons for
sure, it doesn't prove anything, including your alleged claim that they
lied.
> Did they really lie ? Did they not provide you with what you
> paid them for, and at the agreed upon price ? If you lived up to
> your agreement would any of these fees be applied ?
So in both cases, the answers were really No, No, and No.
Ray
|
2952.94 | requesting advice, not arguments. thanks. | BGSDEV::RAMSAY | | Fri Feb 14 1997 15:03 | 34 |
| an update from the person who initiated this 1997 string about Royal
Crest lease problems (.64)
Last night I had to go to the office to pick up a package. I was asked
if we (my husband and I) had gotten our lease "settled" (signed, I
guess is what they were asking). I said that no, we had not nor were
we going to sign another lease because (I reiterated) we are looking
for a place to purchase and won't be renting for another whole year.
They, in turn, reiterated our choices: a 30-day "extension" (they have
their own unique definition of an extension), a "break-the-lease
clause" (cost: $700), or another 12-month lease. I said I would not be
signing any of these.
An hour ago I heard a message on my home machine from the property
manager stating that if it were indeed true that we would not be
signing any of the choices offered us, he would begin EVICTION
PROCEEDINGS. Can you believe this? (That's a rhetorical question; no
need to start more arguments in here. I need guidance.)
I just hung up from speaking with him personally. He said that we
could have a 60-day extension, which I don't think I knew about before,
and he will send it to us for our signature (my request). He said
we'll have 60 more days to find a place to purchase or else we'll have
to sign a new lease.
He also said that Royal Crest makes no exceptions, and hasn't in the 2
years he has been the property manager there; otherwise, they would be
discriminating if they made me a special agreement. I wonder whether
anyone can dispute what he says. I also wonder whether everyone pays
the same amount of rent for the same size unit; because if they don't,
then Royal Crest is already practicing discrimination.
Right, Eric? :-)
|
2952.95 | Good luck | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Fri Feb 14 1997 16:06 | 20 |
| re:94
It might be worth while to talk to a lawyer at this point. I
believe the initial consultation is free. You need to find out what
the laws are pertaining to this. There's likely a state wide agency
you could call for information as well. You could try the State
Attorney General's office for starters.
If you went for a 60 day lease and couldn't find anything, at least it
would hold off the eviction process. I don't know how long this takes,
but if it's a month or more, it gives you the 2-3 months you were looking
for. The lawyer may also be able to offer suggestions on ways to give you
more time or other helpful tips.
Although it may sound like it, I have no feelings either way towards
Royal Crest or Flately. I can sympathize with your position because
I've been there myself. I wound up moving in with friends while I was
closing on my first home purchase because of very similar circumstances.
Regards......Ray
|
2952.96 | | HAZMAT::WEIER | | Mon Feb 17 1997 10:17 | 22 |
|
In most apt complexes, people aren't paying the same rent for the same
type of unit. There's the "basic" difference of what floor you're on,
and typically non-basement is $10-20/mo more than the bottom floor. On
top of that, there are the "times" that they change the rent amount.
Your rent is going up now because your lease is expiring. Someone
else's may have gone up 6 mos ago, and someone else's may not go up for
another 4-5 mos, depending on when the increase was effective.
And there's the issue of individual apts, which may not apply in your
case since it's so huge but it may ....
In my current situation, I rent 1/2 duplex. The whole complex is owned
by a father and his 2 sons. Dad charges a different amount for rent,
as does each of the sons. And the sons charge an addt'l $30/mo if the
unit that you're renting has new carpets when you move in. And if you
have a unit w/ older carpet, you are allowed to have a cat. If it's
new carpet, you're not. Those are the rules, and all of the rules are
applied equally, so I don't think that it's discrimination.
-Patty
|
2952.97 | | BRITE::FYFE | Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. | Mon Feb 17 1997 11:42 | 16 |
| > He also said that Royal Crest makes no exceptions, and hasn't in the 2
> years he has been the property manager there; otherwise, they would be
> discriminating if they made me a special agreement.
Don't you just love this kind of logic ...
> I just hung up from speaking with him personally. He said that we
> could have a 60-day extension, which I don't think I knew about before,
> and he will send it to us for our signature (my request). He said
> we'll have 60 more days to find a place to purchase or else we'll have
> to sign a new lease.
If this lease states you'll sign a new lease or leave at the end of the 60
days I wouldn't sign ...
Doug.
|
2952.98 | | BRITE::FYFE | Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. | Mon Feb 17 1997 11:49 | 14 |
| > They, in turn, reiterated our choices: a 30-day "extension" (they have
> their own unique definition of an extension), a "break-the-lease
> clause" (cost: $700), or another 12-month lease. I said I would not be
> signing any of these.
You might humbley suggest that their policy be changed such that a break the
lease clause is not required after the first lease term expires and 30 or
60 days notice is given.
Then, they could avoid 'discriminatory' practices and not hold folks up
for money they have no right to.
Doug.
|
2952.99 | ??? | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Feb 17 1997 12:39 | 11 |
| re:97
> If this lease states you'll sign a new lease or leave at the end of
> the 60 days I wouldn't sign ...
Just out of curiousity, why ? I would think that the lease which is
already signed says that you either need to sign a new lease or move by
the end of the lease.
Ray
|
2952.100 | It can take weeks just to get mortgage commitments ... | BRITE::FYFE | Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. | Mon Feb 17 1997 12:48 | 20 |
| > Just out of curiousity, why ? I would think that the lease which is
> already signed says that you either need to sign a new lease or move by
> the end of the lease.
If, having already stipulated to that agreement in the first lease, you
failed to comply with that agreement, I see agreeing to this again as
continuing the cycle of false expectations.
I think it is important at this point to let the landlord know exactly
what you expect to do, and why the landlord will not loose out.
In this new 60 day lease, I would make certain that the landlord understands
that, if a new place of residence has not been secured by then, that he can
expect continued monthly payments, but that such payments will not be made
under a 1 year lease with a lease break penalty unless a waver of that
penalty is allowable given 30 or 60 day notice.
It is easily done if the management is reasonable.
Doug.
|
2952.101 | | KMOOSE::CMCCUTCHEON | Charlie McCutcheon | Tue Feb 18 1997 17:01 | 13 |
| > It is easily done if the management is reasonable.
From reading the previous replies (long compile & link!), the mangement
is not reasonable. Period. They apparently don't have to be, they seem
to stay in business. Sounds like they think the 60 day mini-lease is being
reasonable. As opposed to evicting, it probably it is.
I'd suggest moving, since you don't like the landlord, either to a better
appartment, or to the house you want. If you weren't prepared to move
ASAP, then sign the 60 day extention, and move at the end. Unless they
decide to give you another 60 day at the end.
Charlie
|
2952.102 | Just be brutally honest ... | BRITE::FYFE | Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. | Tue Feb 18 1997 21:43 | 22 |
|
Ya, these rental giants are like big gorrilas. But in the end, it is
against their best interest to start the eviction process because
it can take a LONG time to reach the end, and can cost more than
its worth in laywer fees and uncollected rent.
Asking them to explain he purpose of the $700 break lease hit
on a 1 year lease, and then asking them it's purpose AFTER the
first year, and pressing the issue, will usually bring them
around to a breakable lease with a notice, which is what you
want in the first place.
But they won't go voluntarilly ;-)
And remember, they still have your deposits, so the agreement
should stipulate that they won't use those funds for a
penalty payment.
Best of luck.
Doug.
|
2952.103 | Problem: They already have your money | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Wed Feb 19 1997 09:09 | 18 |
| This is where a lawyer can help. There are certain legalities
around the security deposit. There are conditions where you can legally
apply the security deposit towards your last months rent. Since they are
in possession of the money, they can make it difficult to retrieve it
under these circumstances.
Also, I've heard (but never verified) that you don't have to pay
rent after you've been served with an eviction. If true, this may be
a bargaining chip to use. Again, a lawyer consultation can help,
because they'll likely try to recover costs from your security deposit.
Their 60 day lease offer is their cut at being reasonable. To some
degree, it is. Their policy clearly seems to be 1 year lease or move.
If you do neither, they want to penalize you. They just aren't stating
it that way, and probably can't for some legal reason. Based on their
actions though, it seems fairly apparent.
Ray
|
2952.104 | update | BGSDEV::RAMSAY | | Wed Feb 19 1997 09:36 | 16 |
| Thanks, everyone, for your support and suggestions. Keep 'em coming,
and I'll keep you updated.
Last night we received the "60-day EXTENSION." Ha. It is a brand-new
lease, stating that if we do not move out by April 30, 1997, then we
automatically begin a new 12-month lease. Also, the property manager
phoned me this morning, confused because he just opened the letter I
sent him dated February 10, stating that we request a tenant-at-will
lease because we are planning to purchase property. He wanted to know
if I sent that letter before or after we had spoken on 2/14. I told
him I'd mailed it before, and the reason for the letter is to go on
record in writing with our intentions just in case we needed to prove
this at any time in the future.
The new lease is dated March 1, so we have until then to locate what we
want to purchase!
|
2952.105 | | HAZMAT::WEIER | | Thu Feb 20 1997 14:11 | 18 |
| Cross out the part that says that you agree to "automatically go into a
12-mos lease", initial the change, sign it and return it.
Contracts are NOT cast in stone, and are only what BOTH parties agree
to. If you don't agree, don't sign.
Personally, I think I'd have such a headache of it all now, that I'd
just PLAN to move out after 60days, even if you don't have a house, and
move to a different apt.
What happens if, in 45 days, you find the house you want, but can't
close for another 30days?? Do you have 60-days to give notice, or
60-days to move?
And make a copy before you send it back ........
-Patty
|
2952.106 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Feb 24 1997 09:55 | 42 |
| Re .93:
> So the old lease YOU signed had no lies, they provided YOU with
> what you paid them for, and these fees were not applied to YOU.
Since nobody's claiming Flatley snared me with their practices, that's
not relevant. It has nothing to do with whether Flatley catches other
people.
> Then when I point out that their actions assured them of at least
> 30+ days notice, you respond by saying that doesn't fit into the
> situation.
That's because it doesn't.
> I can think of at least 2 or 3 situations right off the top of my
> head to support a need for more notice.
Like what?
>>> Did they really lie ? Did they not provide you with what you
>>> paid them for, and at the agreed upon price ? If you lived up to
>>> your agreement would any of these fees be applied ?
>>
>> [Elided by Dodier:] yes, yes, and yes.
>
> So in both cases, the answers were really No, No, and No.
That's three questions, not two, and the answers are yes, yes, and yes.
Or did you really mean to assert that no, Flatley did not provide what
was agreed upon and paid for?
-- edp
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|
2952.107 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Feb 24 1997 09:56 | 18 |
| Re .94:
> I also wonder whether everyone pays the same amount of rent for the
> same size unit; because if they don't, then Royal Crest is already
> practicing discrimination.
Why would you think it is not completely legal to charge different
amounts for the same-size unit?
-- edp
Disclaimer incorporated by reference. Send mail for copy. No
permission of any sort is granted to the moderators.
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|
2952.108 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Feb 24 1997 09:59 | 16 |
| Re .103:
> . . . they want to penalize you. . . . Based on their actions
> though, it seems fairly apparent.
Hmm, where have I seen that before?
-- edp
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|
2952.109 | Reality check | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Feb 24 1997 15:16 | 10 |
| For something more constructive, I think .105 has the right idea.
It can take many months just to find the "right" place. Even after you do,
it can easily take 2-3 months to get through the offer/counter-offer
bit, coordinate a home inspection, appraisal, financing, other typical
closing requirements, plus the time needed for existing owners to
close/move (if applicable). Since Flately clearly doesn't want to enter
into a tenant-at-will agreement, it's probably best to move someplace more
agreeable to tenant-at-will leases.
Ray
|
2952.110 | Skating on thin ice | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Feb 24 1997 15:54 | 33 |
| re:106
> Since nobody's claiming Flatley snared me with their practices,
> that's not relevant.
> Flatley offered the new lease with less than two months to go on the
> old lease. They pulled the same thing with my lease renewal.
So the part where they tried to get you to sign a new lease is
relevant, but the fact that you basically had no problems when you
fulfilled your agreement and moved on time is irrelevant. Hmmmm ;-)
From: 2952.90
> The short notice is evidence that the landlord really does not need
> long notice, so it would be false of them to say otherwise.
It's not evidence of anything. You are walking a very fine line here.
You are implying that a company, that you specifically named, lies and
tries to "snare" people with its business practices. Since this company has
no voice here, and your "evidence" is strictly conjecture, you may be
over that line regarding negative comments about a business entity. The
situation in .64 could also wind up in "pending legal action", which makes
things even stickier. The comment from 2952.90 -
> Since your understanding is at fault, nobody should give any credence to
> your opinions in the matter.
and others like it, aside from being very rude and unnecessary,
were also based on conjecture and likely fall under the category of
"devaluing statements" in P&P section 6.54.
Ray
|
2952.111 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Mon Feb 24 1997 16:30 | 49 |
| Re .110:
> So the part where they tried to get you to sign a new lease is
> relevant, but the fact that you basically had no problems when you
> fulfilled your agreement and moved on time is irrelevant. Hmmmm ;-)
When you figure out that 60 days is more than 30 days, let us know.
Flatley's deliberate maneuvering to give themselves only about 30 days,
or less, is relevant because it proves they do not need 60 days. That
they honored a contract is irrelevant because it has no bearing on
anything anybody is claiming. If you think otherwise, then demonstrate
HOW it is relevant.
Even if a person who commits fraud honors the contract they sign, they
may still be legally and ethically liable for their fraud. E.g.,
suppose Circuit City tells you their price for a VCR is $300 and
Lechmere's is $200, and Circuit City knows this is false, and they
agree to sell you a VCR for $300 and they do so. Now Circuit City has
fulfilled their agreement. But they are still liable for fraud and
still owe you $100 for it.
> You are implying that a company, . . .
No, I didn't. In my first note in this thread, I wrote "Flatley
*would* be lying *if* they said . . ." That is subjunctive, not an
implication, and that has consistently been my position.
> . . . you may be over that line regarding negative comments about a
> business entity.
Oh, dear, whatever will I do.
> . . . being very rude and unnecessary . . .
The statement is relevant and necessary since it should be pointed out
to readers that you have repeatedly misrepresented my statements and
should not be trusted. You had several chances to correct your errors
but chose instead to wrongfully characterize my statements. The
consequences of your actions are your own fault.
-- edp
Disclaimer incorporated by reference. Send mail for copy. No
permission of any sort is granted to the moderators.
Public key fingerprint: 8e ad 63 61 ba 0c 26 86 32 0a 7d 28 db e7 6f 75
To find PGP, read note 2688.4 in Humane::IBMPC_Shareware.
|
2952.112 | Done | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Feb 24 1997 17:23 | 6 |
| If this was SOAPBOX, this crap would be expected, but it's not. Unless
anyone has a compelling reason otherwise, I'll refer this discussion to
Human Resources for them to determine its relevance to section 6.54. In
any event, this will stop.
Ray
|
2952.113 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Feb 25 1997 08:38 | 15 |
| Re .112:
> In any event, this will stop.
You're going to stop misrepresenting my notes? That's a relief.
-- edp
Disclaimer incorporated by reference. Send mail for copy. No
permission of any sort is granted to the moderators.
Public key fingerprint: 8e ad 63 61 ba 0c 26 86 32 0a 7d 28 db e7 6f 75
To find PGP, read note 2688.4 in Humane::IBMPC_Shareware.
|
2952.114 | | BGSDEV::RAMSAY | | Tue Feb 25 1997 10:23 | 14 |
| May I, the 1997 base noter, jump in here? Thank you.
Gentlemen, taking this disagreement of yours to H.R. is not going to
help me or anybody else. We noters ask for help. If 2 replying noters
lock horns like elk in rutting season or kindergartners on a playground
and run to H.R.to tell on each other, whom does that help? No one.
It would endanger and maybe erase the wide field we currently have for
ideas exchange and suggestions.
Please cut it out.
And thanks again, everyone, for all your help. When my situation is
over and done with, I will post the how I did it. Things are really
looking up thanks to the noting community!
|
2952.115 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Feb 25 1997 13:47 | 26 |
| Re .114:
> . . . whom does that help?
Would you like a lecture on the value of adversarial examinations of an
issue?
> It would endanger and maybe erase the wide field we currently have
> for ideas exchange and suggestions.
I would like to erase Notes as a forum in Digital Equipment Corporation
precisely because it is not a wide field. It is a inbred forum,
focusing too narrowly on internal matters when Digital needs to be part
of the world-wide conversation on the Internet. I recommended that
about a decade ago, before the Internet exploded, and Digital lost out
on the opportunity to lead Internet advances instead of follow them.
-- edp
Disclaimer incorporated by reference. Send mail for copy. No
permission of any sort is granted to the moderators.
Public key fingerprint: 8e ad 63 61 ba 0c 26 86 32 0a 7d 28 db e7 6f 75
To find PGP, read note 2688.4 in Humane::IBMPC_Shareware.
|
2952.116 | discrimination in renting | BGSDEV::RAMSAY | | Fri Mar 07 1997 10:03 | 12 |
| from the 1997 base noter (.64)
I've just discovered that someone else is paying considerably LESS than
we are. First I must go see theirs to be sure it's the same size as
ours to be absolutely sure.
What recourse do we have? This is discrimination, charging 2 different
rents for comparable units.
Thanks.
*Susan*
|
2952.117 | | SMURF::BINDER | Errabit quicquid errare potest. | Fri Mar 07 1997 10:27 | 14 |
| Re .116
Did you and those other people rent your units on the same day?
Are the two units on the same floor, with the same scenic overlook, the
same distance from parking and recreational facilities, and in all
other respects the same or so nearly the same as to constitute no
advantage of any sort to one over the other?
Your landlord may quite legitimately have changed the rent schedule
between the time the other people moved in and the time you moved in,
and it is not unusual for units having different benefits/features to
go for different rents. I used to work as a rental clerk in a 200-
unit complex; I've seen this, and I understand its legitimacy.
|
2952.118 | | BGSDEV::RAMSAY | | Fri Mar 07 1997 10:48 | 1 |
| Thanks for that food for thought, Binder-san.
|
2952.119 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Mar 07 1997 12:25 | 6 |
| It's not discrimination any more than it is for different people to pay
different prices for the same car - it happens all the time and is legal. Now
if you could prove that you were charged more due to some bias the landlord
had, that might be something, but that seems a very much uphill battle.
Steve
|
2952.120 | | METSYS::THOMPSON | | Fri Mar 07 1997 12:37 | 19 |
|
At least for Flatley anyway ... A neighbor of mine was told there was to
be a big rent hike. So she went off and found an apartment that was about the
same size and was cheaper than what she was currently paying. She gave notice
in to the Manager and thought that was the end of it. Then the manager
comes back and talks about a little 'mix-up' and by the way ... they could
match that lower rent!
So you may find people on all sorts of different rents for the same
appartments. Flatley do bluff and if you are prepared to call it you may
get a better deal.
This was a few years ago as well, I don't know what the current market is
like.
Mark
|
2952.121 | | BGSDEV::RAMSAY | | Fri Mar 07 1997 14:19 | 1 |
| interesting. very interesting. Thanks, guys.
|
2952.122 | The text for the relevant sections of law are already posted in this topic | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Mon Mar 10 1997 19:50 | 9 |
| > Also, I've heard (but never verified) that you don't have to pay
> rent after you've been served with an eviction. If true, this may be
> a bargaining chip to use. Again, a lawyer consultation can help,
> because they'll likely try to recover costs from your security deposit.
If I recall, this is not true. See .61 where I previously posted
the text for RSA 540, which covers evictions, and reply .63 where I
posted the text for RSA 540-A, which covers prohibited practices
and security deposits.
|
2952.123 | and they lived happily ever after. | BGSDEV::RAMSAY | | Wed Mar 26 1997 13:21 | 14 |
| a happy ending from the 1997 base noter (.64)
Today we are moving out of Royal Crest and into a "mom and pop" owned
house which has no lease. We are welcome to stay for as long as we
want. I found the new place via a Notes ad. Thank goodness for
Digital!
We ended up signing a new Royal Crest lease that had a 30-day extension
clause to it. We signed with no qualms because we had already found
the new place to rent.
Thank you, everyone. Your support and suggestions are great.
*Susan*
|
2952.124 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Wed Mar 26 1997 15:41 | 4 |
| You're living in a place with no lease? A lease protects you as well
as the owner. Just hope that "mon and pop" don't turn mean on you...
-John
|
2952.125 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Wed Mar 26 1997 22:49 | 20 |
| > You're living in a place with no lease? A lease protects you as well
> as the owner. Just hope that "mon and pop" don't turn mean on you...
Leases are worthless for the owner as far as I'm concerned.
My first couple of tenants I didn't even bother with a rental
agreement. I do have a signed rental agreement with my current
tenants, but the fact that it's signed by them is worthless to me.
My current tenants are in violation of several items in my
rental agreement. All you can do is turn a blind eye unless
they violate something major. The important things to me are
that they are quiet (even if I wasn't owner-occupied) and they
pay their rent pretty much on time.
But like I said, a lease or rental agreement is worthless. If
they stopped paying rent, etc etc, I could kick them out, but
I'd never see a penny. And being owner-occupied (and less than
4 units) I can give them the boot anytime even if they paid
their rent and I had signed a lease that expires months or
more into the future. Read the RSA's whose text is posted in
this topic.
|