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Updated about 8 years ago,

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Linda S.
  • Investor
  • Richmond, VA
2,337
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1,665
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Pit Bulls-- changing pet policies mid-lease?

Linda S.
  • Investor
  • Richmond, VA
Posted

I was wondering if I could get some opinions/suggestions on the best way to handle this situation.   I have a duplex, that's fully renovated with ceramic tile throughout, so we have an open pet policy.  

Our first tenant stated he had a "mixed terrier" which I thought was a Scottish Terrier  (like http://theterriermix.com/), so we signed the lease without seeing the dog(never again!).  It's pretty much a pitbull, however it has no aggressive history and is very nice/sweet.     Tenant has renters insurance.   We also have in place a statement saying the dog is not aggressive and doesn't have an aggressive history.    We stated we take all breeds, as long as they have renters insurance and the dogs don't have any aggressive history.  So the tenant isn't technically going against anything in our contract.

Now, the new tenants on the other side of the duplex wants to get a pitbull, and they are saying that "since the neighbor has one, they should be allowed to get one too."    When we agreed to first dog (yes, we should have seen it first), we didn't know it was pretty much a  pitbull.    Our insurance said they cover pretty much all dogs, but not pitbulls.   I even said to the insurance company "great, because one has a terrier-mix" and he didn't say it wouldn't be covered, so I assume it's not an issue, as the tenant stated it was a "terrier-mix" to us.   Since pitbull isn't a breed, not sure how to cover that?  Both renters have at least 100K in liability insurance on their policy.  The original tenant has been great, pays on time and is a respectful military client, so the dog hasn't caused any issues.     

What is the best way to handle this?   Tell them that the neighbors dog is a "terrier-mix," and they're allowed that?  Try and implement a new pet policy before the newer tenants get a dog, and say tough luck, no pitbulls?   Kick the original dog "terrier-mix" out, and implement a strong pet policy?  Tell them we're changing our policy next time they sign the lease?  Demand I am put on their insurance?   Say they need more insurance~ $1M? Get large PUP?  Both tenants have 1 year leases, that just started within a few months, and have passed all other tenant qualifications, and are overall very responsible people.     

I may be overreacting, but I'd rather be proactive with this than reactive after a bite.   Please help! 

~Linda

Ps.  Our new policy moving forward is cats okay, small dogs only.

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