Permabanned
- Joined
- 9 Aug 2009
- Posts
- 12,234
- Location
- UK
"fu kindly"
Cheers. I'm looking for a new place to live, as even if I get him to back down on this charge the process has rather soured our working relationship. Good to know my options.
Who regulates landlords / estate agents? I'm not his only tenant, and I doubt I'm the only one being invoiced. If it turns out the charge is illegal then it's worth reporting.
Ok I have a reasonably similar issue, not sure if it warrants its own thread here.
I'm past my 6month break lease in my 12 month contract and am thinking of leaving the property, however I have just realised that my landlady actually never put my deposit into a DPS. Now god knows what's been happening to this pretty large sum of money! (8 weeks rent)
My questions is if I tell her I'm leaving and she tries to make charges to me from the deposit, am I in a position to turn around and take her to court for not using a DPS?
Tenants can apply for a court order requiring the deposit to be safeguarded or the prescribed information to be given to him about the scheme in which the deposit is safeguarded.
Where the court believes that the landlord has failed to comply with these requirements, or the deposit is not being held in an authorised scheme, the court must either order the landlord within 14 days of the making of the order to repay the deposit; or order the landlord to pay the deposit to the custodial scheme administrator.
The court must also order the landlord to pay to the tenant three times the deposit amount within 14 days of the making of the order.
Interesting, from the page linked in my previous post:
You could be in for a bonus!!!
Yea someone mentioned that before, but the thing is the landlord can put the deposit in the scheme right up to the last minute of the court order and the whole thing is dropped.
I'm just wondering that since I now wish to leave, is there any point in making her put it into a DPS just to immediately request it back.
I'd say yes, otherwise she could just refuse to give the deposit back. At least if you go to court, she'll either have to pay it to you directly or put it into a scheme where she would have to justify any deductions from it.
I'll hit her up with the court order![]()
I would guess that your deposit is designed to cover not only the possibility of your leaving without giving notice (all too common) but also any damage to the property. suspect that any decision on what will be repaid depends on an inventory.
Who prepares this inventory and has a new one been done?
Inventories cost money and the DPS is entirely for the benefit of the tenant, I doubt that ANY landlord is in favour of them. Pay the £45 or move - simples![]()
Interesting, from the page linked in my previous post:
You could be in for a bonus!!!