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THE NEWS Change to Megan’s
Law Has Implications for Landlords
The hot topic among landlords and property
managers in 2005 is the emergence of the California Attorney
General’s sex offender database website. As you no doubt know, the
California Department of Justice has maintained a 900 number to
their Sex Offender Identification Hotline for some time. A new law
now requires that information about sex offenders be made
available on an internet website. Previously, you, your residents,
and the general public could only get sex offender information by
personally visiting local law enforcement offices or by calling
1-900-448-3000. However, the California Attorney General is now
making available the registered home address of sex offenders who
are believed to be the most serious offenders at
http://www.meganslaw.ca.gov.
To read a discussion of the rules for the use of the database and
the liability landlords may be assuming, whether they elect to use
the database or not to use the database,
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Solutions NOW!
Keeping Up with the Law
The best landlords stay abreast of legal changes
that affect the way they do business. Eliminating the
opportunity for a tenant to trip you on a technicality can
drastically reduce the hassle factor of your business.
This article discusses changes in Section 1942 of the California
Civil Code that are in effect as of January 2004. This code
section previously provided that a landlord is liable to a tenant
for up to $1,000 when
1) the landlord demands or collects rent on a building that is
untenantable,
2) the property has been inspected by a public officer
responsible for the
enforcement of any housing law,
3) the public officer has provided a specified notice to a
landlord, and
4) the violations have continued to exist for 60 days.
The new law provides that a landlord is liable also when
5) the landlord issues a notice of rent increase or
6) issues a 3-day notice pursuant to an unlawful detainer
action if Items 2 and 3, above, exist, and
7) the period of time
that the violations need to have continued to exist is reduced from 60 days to 35 days.
The amount that a tenant can collect under these provisions is
increased from $1000.00 to $5,000.00.
The previous law permitted a landlord to bring an action for
unlawful detainer and permitted the tenant to assert an
affirmative defense that the landlord had failed in his/ her
obligation to provide a tenantable dwelling or that the landlord
had breached some other warranty of habitability.
The new law provides that the landlord who institutes an unlawful
detainer proceeding based upon a tenant's nonpayment of rent
is liable to the tenant for reasonable attorney's fees and
costs of the suit, in an amount to be fixed by the court,
if the landlord is in violation of specified provisions of the
Civil Code and the Health and Safety Code.
What are those specified provisions?
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A revision
to the security deposit law will require landlords to provide
receipts to the tenants when deductions are taken from security
deposits. The newest form provided in our forms library will
help you comply with the new law. And, of course, as always,
all forms are free to download for California Landlord Solutions
members! Civil Code Section 1950.5 will require landlords to
provide tenants with receipts when they use a tenant’s security
deposit for services, repairs, or cleaning to the rental unit.
This new law takes effect January 1, 2004. With some exceptions,
landlords must provide tenants with the following no later than
21 days from the time that the tenant vacates the premises:
-
(This is the same
as always) An itemized statement indicating the basis for, and
the amount of, any security received and the disposition of the
security and shall return any remaining portion of the security
to the tenant; and
-
(This is the
new part) Copies of receipts, bills, invoices, or a vendor price
list or other vendor document that reasonably documents the cost
of the items purchased by the owner and used in the repair or
cleaning of the unit.
For more
details on this new law, join California Landlord Solutions now!
Increased
Penalties for Bad Faith Retention of Security Deposit
The court may award
damages for bad faith whenever the facts warrant such an award,
regardless of whether the injured party has specifically requested
relief. In any action under
this section, the landlord has the burden of proof as to the
reasonableness of the amounts claimed. Members of
California Landlord Solutions will find the forms necessary to
comply with this new legislation.
Forms currently
available to our Members are on our site for this application
include:
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New Law
Requires Landlord to Walk Thru with Resident!
There are a number of new
Landlord-Resident laws for 2003 that savvy landlords need to be
aware of. Most are very detailed, and one wrong move by the
landlord can mean that his tenant will win an action against
him.
The new law that is discussed
in this month’s newsletter mandates a walk-through for a
vacating resident and describes the required process. Beginning
January 1, 2003, landlords must perform a walk-through with
residents no earlier than two weeks prior to the termination of
the tenancy if requested by the resident. If requested by the
resident, the landlord, or an agent of the landlord, shall make
an initial inspection of the rental at a reasonable time. This
inspection is in addition to any final inspection the landlord
or his agent may make after the resident has vacated the
premises.
The intent of this new law is
to give residents an opportunity to remedy identified
deficiencies in the unit prior to move out. The landlord must
notify the resident in writing of the resident’s option to
request a walk-through or an inspection of the premises within
two weeks of the resident’s departure. The landlord must also
notify the resident of the resident’s right to be present at
the inspection. The purpose of the inspection is to allow the
resident an opportunity to fix anything that is broken, to clean
anything that needs cleaning, or to do anything else he needs to
do in order to avoid deductions from the security deposit.
If a resident does not to
request an inspection after being notified of his right to have
one, no further action on the part of the landlord is required.
If an inspection is requested by the resident, the landlord and
resident must attempt to schedule the inspection at a mutually
acceptable date and time. If a mutual time is agreed upon for
the inspection, the landlord must give at least 48 hours prior
written notice to the resident of the date and time of the
inspection. The resident and the landlord may agree to forgo the
48-hour prior written notice by both signing a written waiver.
If a mutually agreed time cannot be scheduled, the landlord must
give at least 48 hours written notice to the resident of the
date and time for an inspection.
The resident need not be
present during the time of the inspection. If the resident is
not present at the agreed-upon time, the landlord should
continue with the inspection whether the resident is present or
not, unless the resident previously withdrew his or her request
for the inspection.
The inspection should be scheduled within a reasonable time
after notification of either party’s intention to terminate
the tenancy, before the end of the lease term, but no earlier
than two weeks before the termination of the tenancy or the end
of the lease date.
The landlord must give the
resident an itemized statement based on his inspection. The
itemized statement should specify repairs or cleaning that the
landlord plans to make the basis of any deduction from the
resident’s security deposit. This itemized statement must
include the actual text of specified sections of the security
deposit law (CA Civil Code section 1950.5). California law can
be found online at www.leginfo.ca.gov/
calaw.html but don’t panic. The language is available
on the
forms that are available on this site! The statement must be given
to the resident, if the resident is present for the inspection,
or should be left by the landlord inside the premises if the
resident is not present.
During the time following the
initial inspection until the end of the tenancy, the resident
should be given a chance to remedy identified deficiencies, in
order to avoid deductions from the security deposit. The
landlord has the right to use the security deposit for
deductions that are itemized in the statement that are not
corrected by the resident, so long as the deductions are allowed
by law.
Deductions allowed by law
include the default by the resident in the payment of rent, the
repair of damages to the unit, exclusive of ordinary wear and
tear, caused by the resident or the resident’s guests, the
cleaning of the unit in order to bring the unit to the same
level of cleanliness it was in at the inception of the tenancy,
the failure of the resident to restore, replace, or return
personal property or appurtenances, damage to the unit that
occurred between completion of the initial inspection and
termination of the tenancy, and damage to the unit that was not
identified by the landlord during the initial inspection due to
the presence of the resident’s possessions.
Join
Now to Find Out More About Mold and What
You Need to Know...........
In recent years, there has been
an increase in media coverage of mold-related problems in rental
property. While mold has always been present in our environment,
there has been an increase in mold occurrences in buildings.
This increase has been attributed to an aging building stock;
new housing construction where porous materials may not have
been kept dry during construction; and modern building
techniques designed to conserve energy that also seal in
moisture.
In 2001, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
issued mold remediation guidelines, and in California,
legislation was passed that requires the Department of Health
Services to establish standards for mold hazard identification,
disclosure, and remediation.
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NOW
AND READ THE FULL ARTICLE TODAY!
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