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You're the example of a bad amateur landlord that I hate dealing with. You rent the property to me, and within reason I get to do what the fuck I want to it. Its MY place, not yours. You nolonger get a say, so if you want to be livid, go ahead privately and don't bother me - yet you don't get to be a douche like this landlord. If any landlord entered my place unlawfully I'd simple call the police and let them deal with a trespassing charge, followed by a civil charge. Amateur landlords need to learn the hard way they need to be professional, that this kind of shit only ends up making their life worse. |
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My first landlord in Vancouver was like this, and my roommates former landlord was like this. Thankfully we have a kick ass laid back landlord now. |
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Judging by the pictures this landlord deserves everything he gets. |
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Again, more bad amateur landlords here. You can paint walls all you want, they just have to be painted back when you leave the place to the satisfaction of the landlord. While I live there, I can damn well paint them any colour I want, and you the bad amateur landlord cannot do fuck all about it unless it was in the contract. There's no law against paint, although many stratas have rules about drapes. |
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All I mean by respect is a simple "hey landlord, just so you know, I have a trailer i'll be parking in your the driveway. is that cool?" Or even "hey would you mind if I installed a pool in the backyard?" Nobody likes surprises. Landlords or tenants. And WTF is with your shitty attitude all the time. Seriously, it's ridiculous. |
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OP I would do all this and go further. I would report them to the police and tribunal for unlawful entry. If you haven't, do it now. If you don't want to involve the police, at least contact the tribunal and get it on record. Next step would be a call to CRA to see if they are reporting income on the property. Usually bad amateur landlords are not reporting income, and this would fuck with them more than any damage you could do. If you do decide to leave, remember this section of the RTA. Do not agree to have the damage deposit pay for any damages, let them bill you and force them to return the damage deposit. If they don't, and 15 days pass, they now owe you double. Consider it a bonus that most bad amateur landlords don't know about. Quote:
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What you're asking for is NOT respect, its just being nice. I know we're all Canadians and we tend to say "thank you" when buying something, yet that's just being nice, there's no lack of respect for not going out of the way to be nice. I paid for it, I don't need to thank you for taking my money. Now I would probably ask my landlord before installing a pool, yet would not ask before parking a trailer. Its my parking spot, I can use how I please. Do I need to ask my landlord before parking my Mercedes in my rented parking spot, seeing how many people think its an eyesore :p |
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As a renter you have a lot of rights. I just can not remember the name of the organization. They also can not go into your suite without giving you notice first. They are invading your privacy. |
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Why be such an Asshole landlord@@ We rented our basement out and as long as there not a lot loud noise at night and place seems clean we don't care what they do. I don't think we have any issue with anyone renting our basement all these years. Treat others like the way you want to be treated and they will do the same. No one wants to keep moving and be force to move, is a lot of work and effort. |
if your contract states you are allowed to use the parking stall, then just quote it. If they still bitch, tell them they violated the terms and condition of the tenancy act. They should give you min. 24hrs notice upon entering your place or if both parties agree upon a time of when they can enter without the 24hrs notice. |
Does the RV have storage insurance? |
I get frustrated when people start quoting the RTA to me when we are discussing an issue. Yes, feel free to sit there and tell me that you are within the letter of the law, and yes, I know that section you are quoting because I know it better than you do. BUT, and I think this is what Taylor192 isn't getting, it goes both ways. We'll operate like that. And then you get to deal with a dick landlord that goes around and charges you for every nick and scratch. Hey! It's within the letter of the law. I had a guy move in just last month. Owns a small moving company, and brings his cube van home. We were discussing parking and he decided just to park on the street. We mentioned that maybe on the side instead of out front would be preferred. No problem! No one really wants to look at a huge cube van out their window. I have no "right" within the letter of the law to ask him not to park on the public street in front of the building. He could have told me to pound sand. But, he understood that we weren't being dicks, he knew his truck was ugly and what a nice give and take thing. A week later when he asked if I had some paint he could use, I was equally obliging. I even did his painting for him because he was doing a horrible job. I think the OP pissed the landlord off with a "fuck off" attitude and that's what brings us here today. Myself, I probably wouldn't care about the surprise trailer. You are right...its a vehicle parked in a space. The pool is well beyond use of a backyard. Did anyone offer to pay up extra hydro? There will be a nice dead spot on the lawn for years if its not on concrete. You can't just sit there with the attitude that "I'm a tenant and a customer, I can do whatever I want with the place." You are renting the use of the space. I have given many tenants the "power of a phone call" speech. Don't come to me with a list of issues that you've been sitting on for months is number 1. Tell me about an issue, and I'll look at it. Number 2, is keep the communication open. If you want someone to move in with you,m just let me know. It's an issue if I don't know what the deal is. So on and so on. Ultimately, the power of a phone call would have worked here. Hey! I'd like to get a pool. The owner can give his objections on hydro and probably lawn. Awesome: How about I pay $50 extra in the summer months and re-seed when I leave? Done! Is it working within the letter of the law? No. But its common courtesy. If you don't want someone over your shoulder, buy. |
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In this case however, the evidence suggests that the landlord is one of those dicks who would be impossible to work with. Pretty much everyone in this thread has agreed that the pool isn't kosher. But even worse is the landlord illegally entering the OP's suite, that's a pretty massive alarm bell right there. The main controversy seems to be the trailer. It's either the OP parks it in his spot and the landlord stays unhappy, or the OP has to park it somewhere else at his expense which means he'd be unhappy. Personally I don't think the OP should have to be on the hook for that expense, especially after seeing that it is parked neatly to the side, not obtrusive, it doesn't look decrepit and is insured. |
this is why i hated living in a suite landlords are nice and they become complete assholes with no consideration of people below |
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I think entering the suite is covered in "Being a Landlord 101" on the first day, and yeah, that causes me concern. I think the OP's "fuck off" attitude didn't get him where he wanted to be, and the landlord said, "alright. Fuck me? Fuck you too" There is other evidence on this board of other issues with people that the OP has had that leads me to feel this way. The key here, is to "fuck them too" within the confines of the law. There are a few tenants that have nominated themselves to my "fuck off" list. The key here is, they put themselves on the list. There are some tenants that I instantly get along with really well. There are some that I say hi to, and carry on, and outside our jobs we really wouldn't have anything to do with them. Then there are the ones that push it. Taylor is going to say I'm a prick landlord, but I pride myself on being able to deal with most people. People nominate themselves to the list, purely on attitude. There was a guy at our newest building that actually won me over. He is a heavy smoker. HEAVY. I was working on the unit next to him, and he was giving me shit about the water being off. I kind of took it on the cheek at the time. Then we saw inside his place. Everything was orange. The nicotine had pooled in condensation creating black pools on the window sill. The curtains were crunchy. So I send him a letter. Probably the most direct I've ever sent to a tenant. Basically, I told him here's the issues. Here is what you have to do, and by when. Failure means eviction. I was expecting massive resistance when he requested a meeting. Had it all planned out. He was going to tell me that there was nothing on his lease regarding smoking. Repairs have lapsed for years in the building and you fix that, and then I'll think about fixing my place and so on. Instead, he had an issue with the tone of the letter(how do you dress up, I want you out of the building?) but was apologetic and took full responsibility. He asked for more time to comply than I originally gave him, and we left with a handshake. There is a guy that was, and should still be right on the "fuck off" list, but isn't. I don't like the guy, but I can still work with him. So on my fuck off list, I have a woman that really hasn't done anything "bad" to the building but has a horrible attitude towards me, and as soon as I have enough to work with, I'm going to take her house, but a guy that has done damage but took responsibility is not. My point has gone a little beyond the OP's problem, but its good advice in any situation such as this. You really do get what you give with MOST people. |
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Your smoking example is a great example, yet lets put it into context: Smoking did damage to the unit which needed to be repaired, and the action had to stop before the repairs would become much more extensive. Fair enough. The pool does minimal damage. The OP can buy some fresh sod replace any dead grass, and most shared utility rentals have a clause to adjust prices based on usage. If the pool was using more, bill the tenant more. I do have a problem with this: Quote:
Ultimately I don't think that's the problem here, that the landlord's complaints are not about damage or bills. The complaints are typical NIMBY asshole crap that no-one, community members, neighbours or tenants should have to put up with. |
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I'm surprised the guy with the moving van offered to park on the side street, I would've never complied with that request. Since when did a view of a street become so valuable? Its like that idiot in North Van complaining he cannot sell his $6.5M house cause of a farmer selling produce down the street. More NIMBY crap and deserves no respect. |
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That's cool. If that's your attitude, I hope you like watching tv at a whisper, 'cause if it goes over 2, I'm at your door. If he had said, well, I live at the front of the building and would like to keep an eye on it...hey great! good point. He doesn't by the way. I would never go and ask him to stop parking out front if he did. I'm not a nazi. It's simply a big truck, that isn't all that pretty. It was a reasonable request, and I got a reasonable response. The next time he needs a favour, I'd be more inclined to say yes, instead of no. Which already got called in, and I was more than happy to help. That's how you build a community. If you want to be a dick, then be damned sure you are never going to need something from me-as I said, I'll play whatever game you want to play. We're going to play "letter of the law" then we'll do it. You want to play nice and scratch my back, I'll scratch yours, I can do it just as easy. |
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What happens if his response is just "nah, I'd rather not walk that far". That's on par with your "I like the view", ie not a very good reason, and doesn't quote laws/rules/contracts, just a preference. So what happens then? Do you start nit picking the music volume cause you didn't get your way? do you put him on the "fuck off" list cause he didn't give a good reason for complying with your wishes? If you just mind your own business and don't pull the NIMBY crap on things that ultimately don't really matter, then there's no fine line :p I wouldn't ever dare ask someone not to park on the street, its not a fine line I wish to draw. |
Ha...this is fun, but going round in circles makes me dizzy. I am trying to rent nice apartments in an "up and coming" neighborhood in a building that we've dumped a shitload of work into. If having some big truck parked out front causes a quality tenant to pass and go to one of the several other buildings in the neighborhood going after the same types of people, then it just became a small issue. Now, if a guy across the street parks his there, then I'm dead in the water, but most reasonable people would see what I'm trying to do, and assist in where we're going. And, once again, if his attitude was"I'll park it here to fuck him" then yes, I will nitpick you to fuck you. Not quite in the high school, eye for an eye type way-I really don't have that much time in my life, but in general, I'm not going to go out of my way to be nice, and not have it returned. Just going to put this in there, in case my sample tenant here is a closet fan of the import scene-your truck isn't that bad! Purely using it as an example ;) |
BTW...this is just going to make your head spin...that logic above is the same reason I like attractive people. They look nicer in the halls for new tenants ;) Gotta do something to minimize the impact of the drunk slob on 2. |
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