Tony Velez
Late rents ugh. Please help!
18 May 2016 | 56 replies
The phrase "this is a business" and "training your tenant" come up alot in discussions like this.There is a distinction between what that means said to a tenant and what that means when said to a business partner or peer.You want your tenant to understand that phrase to mean they should pay what is due, when it is due or suffer the consequences stipulated in the contract.
Rich Hupper
Home never went to probate mortgage company won't accept payments
7 May 2016 | 8 replies
If Anne was added as a joint tenant or joint owner without the "right of survivorship" phrase, then the property needs to go through probate before Anne can become the 100% titled owner.
Sal Flores
Texas Residential lease agreement to add "Pest Control terms"
11 June 2018 | 19 replies
I'm not a lawyer, just a lowly landlord, but it seems to me that this phrase is the key: "materially affect the physical health or safety of an ordinary tenant."
Account Closed
mold issue
25 July 2015 | 17 replies
Be sure to use the phrase "mildew" when talking with tenants.
Daniel Dawson
First eviction
22 June 2015 | 16 replies
When you evict use a phrase like " bill smith and all other occupants of the house " If the tenant is served and in rehab and doesnt show up you should have a fast eviction.
Kevin W.
Contract Wording for leaving the unit clean and tidy
19 May 2015 | 1 reply
You could just add a phrase to make it more clear, if you wanted to, something like:"to include cleaning and removing all debris from the premises"
Dan Mackin
Passed the Colorado RE Exam
28 May 2015 | 15 replies
Account Closed- I wasn't joking when I said it was substantially more than some :-)
Steve R.
Broiler stops working and tenant wants a reduction off the months rent
19 November 2015 | 19 replies
The phrase "messing up his life" for an issue like the one outlined is a huge red flag.
Account Closed
The "lost my wallet and somone overdrafted my acct" excuse
13 April 2016 | 32 replies
Account ClosedIf you have a website, put it there as a joke!
Matt Moldenhauer
HUD Threatens To Sue Landlords Who Screen Tenants For Felonies
13 April 2016 | 18 replies
“HUD will use the full force of the law to protect the fair housing rights of folks who’ve been arrested or who’re returning to their communities after serving time in jail or prison,” HUD Secretary Julian Castro warned.By “full force,” he means the “disparate impact” theory of civil-rights enforcement, which HUD claims is written into the Fair Housing Act even though the phrase appears nowhere in the statute.Disparate impact holds businesses liable for colorblind policies and practices that may have adverse outcomes for minorities — in this case, screening all apartment applicants for criminal histories.