Kindzmarauli
Junior Member
I am in Culver City, Los Angeles Cty, California.
At the end of a 5-year commercial lease, I found out that I was paying for the neighboring office electricity, to the tune of $6K over five years. After I reported that to the landlord, the landlord appears to be dragging their feet on it, doing month-long "investigations", not responding to emails, etc. The lease ends Sept 30, 2013.
How I know about the electricity: when a previous tenant moved out of the neighboring office, my electricity bill dropped from $200/mo to $40/mo. When a new tenant moved in, the bill went back up to $200/mo. When I didn't use the office at all (no electricity using equipment other than a fridge), the bill stayed the same.
Initially I thought it was a circuit sharing issue, but today, the electrical company said they don't bill my neighbor at all - there is no separate meter for them. The neighbor confirmed that. There is little chance the landlord didn't know about it: they are the ones who must request a metered service for any triple-net space they lease out. So it appears they're dragging their feet on purpose, and leased the space to me fully aware I'd be paying for the neighboring space electricity.
I'd like to give them the benefit of a doubt but not very hopeful. If they end up refusing to compensate me for those charges, do I have any practical legal ways for force them to that won't cost me half the due amount?
Thanks!
At the end of a 5-year commercial lease, I found out that I was paying for the neighboring office electricity, to the tune of $6K over five years. After I reported that to the landlord, the landlord appears to be dragging their feet on it, doing month-long "investigations", not responding to emails, etc. The lease ends Sept 30, 2013.
How I know about the electricity: when a previous tenant moved out of the neighboring office, my electricity bill dropped from $200/mo to $40/mo. When a new tenant moved in, the bill went back up to $200/mo. When I didn't use the office at all (no electricity using equipment other than a fridge), the bill stayed the same.
Initially I thought it was a circuit sharing issue, but today, the electrical company said they don't bill my neighbor at all - there is no separate meter for them. The neighbor confirmed that. There is little chance the landlord didn't know about it: they are the ones who must request a metered service for any triple-net space they lease out. So it appears they're dragging their feet on purpose, and leased the space to me fully aware I'd be paying for the neighboring space electricity.
I'd like to give them the benefit of a doubt but not very hopeful. If they end up refusing to compensate me for those charges, do I have any practical legal ways for force them to that won't cost me half the due amount?
Thanks!