Arnie Hammer
Registered User
- Messages
- 42
Thanks for all of the replies. I think I am going to learn a lesson and move on. At the outset of the new tenancy I told the tenants to make themselves familiar with the law when giving notice. And next time I won't hang myself the same way.
I have dropped enough breadcrumbs already. The emails were only about the set-up of an appointment to collect keys and inspect property. I can see why they could be read why they were by the RTB. Next time I will be more careful.
It wasn't that much hassle and no emotions were involved, on my side anyway. I had to send some evidence and explain myself in writing to the RTB. I don't think I wasted my time on this.
I thought about this and am not really concerned. If a future tenant finds it off-putting then it's not a tenant I want. The RTB hasn't ordered damages which it seems to do when landlords really act the maggot.
If you are looking for another opinion on the fairness of their finding, I think you would need to share actual wording of those emails.
I have dropped enough breadcrumbs already. The emails were only about the set-up of an appointment to collect keys and inspect property. I can see why they could be read why they were by the RTB. Next time I will be more careful.
As I believe I said back in September, who needs the hassle?
Too many hours wasted, too much emotional investment for two weeks of a deposit.
It wasn't that much hassle and no emotions were involved, on my side anyway. I had to send some evidence and explain myself in writing to the RTB. I don't think I wasted my time on this.
I would be less likely to rent from a landlord who has a rtb finding against them.
I thought about this and am not really concerned. If a future tenant finds it off-putting then it's not a tenant I want. The RTB hasn't ordered damages which it seems to do when landlords really act the maggot.