CourtClerk
Senior Member
You're right... you've purchased a home...Stop playing with the semantics.
You're right... you've purchased a home...Stop playing with the semantics.
Wow, you're seriously insane aren't you?As a matter of practical options, tenants with “family in the rental business in several states” would obtain their FIRST line of information from the “family in the rental business in several states.” Apparently, the “family in the rental business in several states” has not be able to address the matter to the tenant’s satisfaction. It is perfectly clear why tenant would need someone to “pass a sanity screen” when members of the “family in the rental business in several states” are not able to “answer the very general and very simple question, typed slowly.” It is unfortunate that NO ONE is able to provide tenant with the response desired -- not the LL, not the PM, not the message board, and not even the "family in the rental business in several states.” The situation is pathetic and unfortunate for tenant (YOU)!
The question isQuestion Asked and Answered:
Posts #6, #9, #11, #15, #18, #20, #24, #26, #28, #32.
To acknowledge and address all potential arguments and scenarios -- real, imaginary, or otherwise -- that tenant (YOU) may attempt to present in a court of law -- to waste Missouri State tax dollars. The arguments and scenarios may change (10 times) but the application of the law to the issue will remain unchanged.
Give the Missouri taxpayers a break! (The nation is in a recession.)
To which I replied:State Law:
Tenant must deliver the forwarding address IN WRITING with the Notice to Vacate in order to make a claim of security deposit violation.
Tenant statements clearly imply that the original WRITTEN notice to vacate did NOT include the forwarding address. The law will not work in YOUR (tenant) favor if the notice to vacate did not include the forwarding mailing address. If the forwarding address was included with the notice to vacate then it is a clear error of the LL's part. Otherwise, tenant is responsible for the delayed delivery for not providing the forwarding address with the notice to vacate.
Interestingly, MANY posts from you later, I've yet to see the cite I requested. Though you were kind enough to quote a MO statute that I quoted in my first (maybe second) post.Please provide the cite/link for the 'State Law' you've paraphrased above. I'll be most interested in reading it.
So it's not just me?In all of that typing you did... you have still failed to answer CJane's question (but you do keep trying to answer the question you want to answer - which wasn't asked), but good try kid. Good try.
Nope, it's not just you, and you're too far from me for us to be sipping on the same stuffSo it's not just me?
None???I think I'll take everything that RMetJr has said and give it the respect it's due.
I understand that. And again, I did NOT say that I wished to sue. I simply asked that if I DECIDED to, small claims was the proper venue.I don't plan into getting sucked into this debate, but it is the Judges discretion to determine whether or not the LL was acting in bad faith. If he determines that he has acted improperly, he may award you damages if not; you are out of the deposit and will be incurring court fees as well.
Absolutely, unequivocally no. I know that no one here knows me, but if you did, you would know that I'm not just being one of those people who says "Not MY kid!" It simply didn't happen.Did the dog pee on the carpet? Probably, all that is needed is a simple distraction and they will do their thing.
Which is why I always had my dog either outside on the patio, in his crate, or closed into the room I was in. He was not left to wander the house in the night, not left in the house during the day, etc.Would it cost more than 150.00 to eliminate the odor from the carpet and padding? Yes.
Absolutely agreed. She's stating it cost $200. Which, if my dog HAD peed on the carpets would seem reasonable. It would also seem that she would need to first with withhold the 'pet deposit' and any additional monies should be held from the security deposit. But they're withholding all of the alleged cleaning expenses from the security deposit and acting as if the pet deposit is just a gift to them from me.If it should cost more than 150, can the LL charge you the overage of the cost? Yes.
The lease says "If tenant is moving in with a pet, a non-refundable deposit in the amount of $150 is required at the time of move-in, or when the pet is acquired/approved by management."P.S. If the 150 was described as a deposit, then theoretically it is refundable. Your landlord and you have to learn to make a distinction between "fee" and "deposit"