Define “consistently”.For sake of argument suppose I was a tenant and my contract obliged me to forward him post. Could my landlord issue a notice to quit for breach of tenant obligations if I failed to do so consistently?
Say only six times out of ten and the lease categorically obliged tenant to forward all post to a specified address.Define “consistently”.
Ok, the lease (very unusually) says post addressed to the landlord has to be forwarded to a specific address.Say only six times out of ten and the lease categorically obliged tenant to forward all post to a specified address.
That would be quite common - lots of apartment developments prohibit hanging clothes on balconies.prohibition on hanging clothes outside, etc,
My point is that a landlord could:I don’t see why you think that is a spurious ground
there is pressure to force landlords to permit pets to be allowed.Really?
Have you got a reference for that?
You probably need to take into account house rules for MUDs and list them. In practice tho, you cannot force tenants to sign away their rights.Absolutely not! Residential Tenancies Act provisions must be complied with and the Act specifically prevents landlords and tenants from contracting out of these provisions.
But the Act is silent on many issues (pets, smoking, payment by standing order, standard of cleaning, garden maintenance to name a few) and landlords are perfectly free to include clauses dealing with these in rental contracts.
In my opinion and experience, landlords would be mad not to address these issues in written agreements. And at the very least, for your own protection, you should have an inventory of contents, and a signed statement verifying the condition of the property at the beginning of a lease.
#1. Always allowed. Tenant has right to "peaceful occupation" - includes right to have visitors/guests.
#2&3 Landlord permission NOT required (same reason as #1) but tenant required to notify landlord of residents. Required by Residential Tenancies Act and usually by lease agreement also. Arguably possible to include term to prevent RaR in lease.
#4. Usually prohibited by lease. May also breach planning law.
#5. A bit murky. Who was party to initial lease agreement? Shared tenancy with joint and several liability? Or was it (eg) three/four separate rooms rented separately in a shared house? If the former, landlord's agreement to replace (or add) a tenant is required. The RTA says that the landlord can't unreasonably refuse consent. If the latter, it's entirely landlord's discretion.
Landlords should be very clear about what they put in a lease agreement to avoid problems down the road. You also need to be vigilant about what scenarios you allow to develop, or you may create an unintended defacto / de jure tenancy, imposing unwanted obligations on yourself.
Where are you getting this from?!Yet somehow if the named tenant takes in a licensee with no right of occupancy in the property, that licensee can magically become a named tenant just by request, and the owner can't refuse, ie, the licensee can force the owner's hand to change the lease terms and grant them all the rights a tenant holds.
I've read it many times and always thought it was nonsense then I read this IT article last week:Where are you getting this from?!
It’s complete nonsense.
Expert? Don’t think so.Expert saying they are a tenant and entitled to be registered with the RTB.
Fair enough but the information in the IT is widely read and taken on board and also the Threshold site which has similar information.Expert? Don’t think so.
I’ve no issue with Threshold’s note.Fair enough but the information in the IT is widely read and taken on board and also the Threshold site which has similar information.
The landlord is not “compelled” to treat a licensee as a tenant - he simply cannot unreasonably refuse a request in this regard. Big difference.The property owner should not be compelled to add the licencew to the lease.
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