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All Forum Posts by: Tom Martin

Tom Martin has started 2 posts and replied 3 times.

I have an old house converted to duplex. 1 unit up, 1 down.

The house has no insulation, so if you fart in bed, the other tenant will hear it.

I currently have a situation where a new downstairs tenant has a young autistic child who literally runs from front to back of the house, all, day,  long, and it shakes the floor and walls.  I feel so sorry for both tenants.

In the future, is there a way to exclude tenants to only retired people, or single people, or no kids?

I've had apartments where the owner would just do what they wanted, legal or not, but I don't want to thread that needle.

Quote from @Nathan Gesner:
Quote from @Tom Martin:

My process is that I will send one written warning reminding them of the smoking policy and tell them to stop. The second time they get a lease violation fine and notice that the next violation will result in termination. The third time is termination with no negotiation.

My no-smoking policy says they cannot smoke inside the unit or outbuilding and they must be at least 20 feet away from any door or window so it's not wafting into the neighbor's unit.


 Thanks.  When you say the 3rd time means termination, is there a process to just to a 'quit' or do I need to still apply for eviction?

I purchased an older duplex with 1st and 2nd floor units. I purchased it for my brother and rented the upstairs unit.  My brother passed after only 10 months.

Long story short, my brother smoked on a screened porch, never inside.  Upstairs tenant never had issues with smoke inside.  Unfortunately I just rented the downstairs unit to a smoker because he swore he never smokes inside because of his young children. I mistakenly verbally told new tenant he could smoke on the porch. You guessed it, on day 1 upstairs tenant is complaining about smoke inside.

I spoke to new guy several times and he swore on his daughters lives he wasn't smoking inside, but 2nd floor started complaining as soon as new guy comes home from work.

Now, I have sent 2 letters, the first saying what the lease says (no smoking inside or out) but if the complaints stopped then he wouldn't hear from me again, i.e. smoke on the porch and you can live your life.  That failed.

The second letter simply said I have discussed it with you without any resolution, so follow the lease, no smoking anywhere, else I will apply for eviction.

Did I screw myself by trying to be 'reasonable'?  Or is the lease the end all be all regardless of what I said verbally?

Lesson learned, gonna rewrite my leases for next time and have zero tolerance to violations.