1 / 64

PLANNING AHEAD TO AVOID TENANT PROBLEMS

PLANNING AHEAD TO AVOID TENANT PROBLEMS. Presented by: Anthony J. Barbieri. ITINERARY. Planning Ahead to Avoid Tenant Problems 9:00 – 10:30 (Barbieri) Renting the Apartment Rental Application – Questions You Should Ask The Lease and What Should be Included Conditions Checklist

Télécharger la présentation

PLANNING AHEAD TO AVOID TENANT PROBLEMS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PLANNING AHEAD TO AVOID TENANT PROBLEMS Presented by: Anthony J. Barbieri

  2. ITINERARY • Planning Ahead to Avoid Tenant Problems 9:00 – 10:30 (Barbieri) • Renting the Apartment • Rental Application – Questions You Should Ask • The Lease and What Should be Included • Conditions Checklist • Lease Guaranties

  3. ITINERARY • BREAK – 10:30 - 1045

  4. ITINERARY • Notice to Quit & Evictions 10:45 – Noon Termination for Non-Payment of Rent • Termination for Breach of Rental Agreement • Termination for No Cause Where There is No Renewal Agreement • Termination of Rental Agreement When Property is Sold • Termination by Landlord Under the Terms of Written Rental Agreement

  5. ITINERARY • Evictions 10:45 – Noon • Grounds for Evictions and Jurisdiction • Service of Summons and Complaint • Rent Escrow • Judgment and Writ of Possession • Advancement • Discovery and Jury Trials • Default and Summary Judgment • Appeals

  6. ITINERARY • LUNCH – Noon – 1:00

  7. ITINERARY • Recap of Morning Lecture Q&A – 1:00 – 1:15 (Cross & Barbieri)

  8. ITINERARY • Ethical Considerations 1:15 – 1:45 (Barbieri) • Legislative Update • Legal and Ethical Issues Surrounding Auditing of Attorney’s Bills • Conflict of Interest • Commingling of Security Deposits

  9. ITINERARY • What Defenses Does a Tenant Have? 1:45 – 2:30 (Cross) • Payment of Rent • Minor Defects, Repair and Deduct • Consumer Fraud Acts • Retaliatory Eviction • Sale and Conversions Into Condominiums (Barbieri) • Agreements With Parties Other Than Tenants • Lack of Notice

  10. ITINERARY • BREAK 2:30 – 2:45

  11. ITINERARY • Discrimination and Americans With Disabilities Act 2:45 – 3:00 (Barbieri) • Discrimination • Americans With Disabilities Act • Texas Architectural Barriers Act

  12. ITINERARY • Special Landlord/Tenant Issues 3:00 – 4:30 • Illegal Evictions – Landlord Lockouts (Barbieri) • UCC Financing Statements (Cross) • Securing Tenant’s Performance Under the Lease – Security Deposits and Landlord’s Liens (Barbieri) • Distress Warrants (Cross) • Differences Between Security Deposits, Letters of Credit and Certificates of Deposit in a Tenant Bankruptcy (Barbieri)

  13. RENTING THE APARTMENT • Repairs • Express Agreements to Repair • City Codes • Construction Eviction • Habitability Legislation • Landlord Duties

  14. RENTING THE APARTMENT • Tenant’s Repairs • Prerequisites for Tenant (“Self Help”) • Notice • Rent • Reasonable time for repairs • Second demand by Tenant • Burden of proof

  15. RENTING THE APARTMENT • Landlord’s “Loopholes” In Repairing the Premises • Severe Casualty • Closing the Rental Premises

  16. RENTING THE APARTMENT • Security Devices • Locks and Other Security Measures Necessary • Security Officers • Re-keying and Changing Locks • Repairs of Security Devices • Right of Landlord to Charge for Repair • Remedies for Noncompliance

  17. RENTING THE APARTMENT • Disclosure of Ownership and Management • Generally • Remedies for Noncompliance

  18. RENTING THE APARTMENT • Smoke Detectors • Generally • Remedies for Noncompliance • No separate damages under common law • Maybe separate damages under DTPA

  19. RENTING THE APARTMENT • Legislative Update • HB 299 – Landlord’s duty to mitigate damages, TPC § 91.006 • HB 388 – F.E.D. Time for setting hearing, TPC § 24.004 • HB 537 - Landlord’s duty to mitigate damages if Tenant abandons, TPC § 91.015 • HB 636 - Fair Housing Practices

  20. RENTING THE APARTMENT • Legislative Update (continued) • HB 1502 – Tenant’s right summon police in emergency, TPC § 92.015 • HB 2160 – Specialty insurance license for certain persons who rent residential property (Sec. 1. Art. 21.09, Insurance Code) • HB 2180 – Charges assessed by landlord, TPC § 93.004 • HB 2187 – Notice to residential tenants re utility interruption, TPC § 92.008 • HB 3190 – Refund or retention of security deposit under commercial lease, TPC § 93.005

  21. RENTAL APPLICATIONS -QUESTIONS YOU SHOULD ASK • Identity Information • Prior Residential Information • Financial Status • Employment History • Criminal Background • Miscellaneous • Statement Regarding False Information • Application Deposits

  22. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Lease Basics & Definitions • “Any written or oral agreement between a Landlord and a Tenant that establishes or modifies the terms for occupying a Premises” TPC § 92.001

  23. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Tenancies and Licenses Distinguished • Lease grants exclusive right to possession • No magic words to create • Look to intent of parties

  24. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Lease Validity • Leases are blends of contract and property law • When in doubt, go with ordinary contract doctrines • Oral leases okay if less than 1 year

  25. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Lease Term • Primary term ends without notice • Watch for removal options

  26. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Covenant of Peaceable, Quite Enjoyment • Unless lease says otherwise, this is implied by law • Key “proviso”

  27. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Changing the Conditions of a Lease • Be careful about modifications to Lease

  28. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Property Rules and Regulations • Landlord should reserve the right to modify from time to time

  29. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Rent and Nonpayment Issues • Most important part of Lease • Due Date • Grace Period • Specify where to send rent • “Additional Rent” • “Lost in mail”

  30. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Late Charges • No specific limit • DTPA - $35 too much for 1 day • Lease is not debt transaction, so no usury • Contradiction • Notice to avoid waiver

  31. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Rent Withholding • Generally, Texas Courts apply theory of “independent contracts” to Leases • Tenant has lien on Landlord

  32. IF YOU ARE STILL AWAKE • YOU ROCK!

  33. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Subleases and Assignments • Texas law differs from many other states, so watch out for form lease • Good idea to prohibit subleases and assignments

  34. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Waiver of Tenant’s Rights • Some Tenant waivers are enforceable, some are not • Be careful with form leases that waive invalid rights

  35. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Exculpatory Clauses • These can protect Landlord by reducing exposure • i.e., Landlord is not responsible for Tenant’s property loss on Premises

  36. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Termination of a Lease • Generally, a Lease terminates at end of term • Can be terminated earlier for breach • Month-to-month and periodic tenancies

  37. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Termination of a Lease • Termination of the Lease Based on Default • Lease Provisions • Demand for Performance • Refusal to Accept Performance • Waiver of Default • Effect on Retaliation • Wrongful Eviction, Termination

  38. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Termination of a Lease • Effect on Termination • Liability for Future Rents – difference between terminating lease and terminating Tenant’s right to possess • Unenforceable Penalties

  39. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Joint and Several Liability of Covenants • Roommates • Agreement between roommates is not binding on Landlord

  40. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Security Deposit • Covered later, but, look at sample language regarding balance due and replenish

  41. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Permitted Use • Living quarters for limited number of people • Pets • Commercial Use

  42. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Prohibitions • Good idea to state what Tenant cannot use Premises for • Don’t forget to reserve the right to terminate

  43. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Utilities • Lease should specify that Tenant is responsible for all utilities • Be careful about utility accounts in Landlord’s name • No rent abatement

  44. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Maintenance • Specify who is responsible for what maintenance • Limit Tenant’s right to paint, or make other improvements

  45. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Abandonment of Premises • In light of H.B. 537, good idea to define abandonment • Landlord should be able to terminate if abandoned

  46. THE LEASE AND WHATSHOULD BE INCLUDED • Notice • Specify where to send, what method (Mail, CM/RRR, Delivery, etc.), alternative methods (Fax, E-Mail) • Specify when effective

  47. CONDITIONS CHECKLIST • Incorporate by reference into Lease • Deadline to turn in • Schedule walk-through upon termination • Helps Landlord comply with statutes regarding return of security deposit

  48. LEASE GUARANTEES • Should be separate agreements • Guarantor should absolutely and unconditionally guarantee • Should not grant additional rights

  49. DISCRIMINATION • Prohibited Practices • Refusal to Negotiate or Rent • Differing Terms or Services • Restricting Choices to Perpetuate Segregation • Discriminatory Advertising • False Information on the Availability of Dwellings • Discrimination in Residential Real Estate-Related Transactions • Handicap Discrimination • Familial Status

  50. AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT • Effective since 1992 • Requires “reasonable accommodations” • Applies to new and remodeled commercial properties

More Related