Showing posts with label Barrie Landlords. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barrie Landlords. Show all posts

Monday, September 9, 2013

Barrie-area couple says strict rules making it hard to evict errant tenants

photo Mark Wenzel
After their tenants were arrested on drug charges and the apartment nearly burned down, the deGroots thought they had just cause to evict their errant tenant.
Not so fast, said officials at the Landlord and Tenant Tribunal Board.
“At the tribunal, our case was dismissed. We lost,” Catherine deGroot said from the shaded deck of her home near Elmvale.
“Where are the rights for the landlords?” her husband Tony demanded.
Struggling with a recent ALS diagnosis, his frustration has turned from his disease to their inability to evict a tenant from their rental property on Blake Street that was the scene of an early morning fire on Aug. 12.
The deGroots learned about the fire when they listened to a voicemail that had been left for them at 6:30 a.m., Aug. 12, requesting they call the Barrie fire department.
They were told the fire started in the bungalow’s front apartment in the basement when a mattress that had been leaning against the wall caught fire.
Catherine deGroot said she knows exactly where the mattress was, because she’d entered the premises — after leaving letters requesting the tenant be available at 5:30 p.m., Friday, Aug. 9 to meet with her — and had a friend photograph what she calls “the absolute squalour” of the apartment.
Clothes strewn around the apartment and hanging from the kitchen sink were the least of her worries. Four cats meowed pitifully, both from hunger and the discomfort of a full litter box and flea bites.
“We couldn’t stay in there long, the fleas were up to here,” she said, pointing to above her ankle. “My feet were black with them.”
Dishes and dirt were piled on every surface, and deGroot admits she missed the syringes and condoms firefighters later told her they found in the basement.
She now believes her tenant wasn’t available to meet with her Friday because she was in jail.
Although the tenant wasn’t charged, a drug bust did occur at the home June 13 by the Barrie police department’s street crime unit.
According to police, at that time two men, a woman and sleeping child were found in the home on Blake Street. A third man entered the home, and he was promptly arrested for cocaine possession. One of the two other men was arrested for five drug-related charges and the other man was released. The young woman was arrested and released. In all, police found almost $2,000 worth of prescription drugs and cocaine and approximately $4,000 in cash.
The deGroots say they originally had a good relationship with the woman. But when her circumstances changed, when rent wasn’t paid and neighbours noticed drug activity, the relationship soured.
The tenants living in the back portion of the bungalow called 911 when fire broke out early that Monday morning.
“We were just falling asleep watching a movie when the TV and A/C flickered,” Jason Malak said. “‘We thought we’d blown a fuse, but the other lights were still on. Then I could hear noises underneath the kitchen — we don’t have a downstairs — and I thought someone was breaking in. Then we heard voices and I noticed a little bit of smoke.”‘
Malak said he opened his door and was greeted by smoke pouring out of the other apartment’s air-conditioner.
“There was a lot more smoke outside. We called 911,” he said.
His girlfriend is about seven months pregnant and was taken to Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre for smoke inhalation concerns before being released.
The couple was removed from their apartment — that was mostly untouched by the fire — until the hydro and water could safely be turned back on.
Public fire and life safety officer with the Barrie fire department, Samantha Hoffman, said the fire was suspicious in nature because no one was living there when it started.
“Yet there was evidence to show that someone had been in the unit shortly before the fire,” she said.
Four cats perished in the fire.
The deGroots’ insurance company has boarded up the former tenant’s apartment and said work would soon began to clean up after the fire.
But the deGroots’ concern is that their tenant still has legal rights to return once it’s fixed.
“Our fear is (she) is still tied to Blake Street and we still have to get her out,” he said.
Running her Landlord Legal business in Barrie and Meaford, April Stewart is a busy woman.
Stewart said she’s seen many drug-related attempted evictions by landlords fail for any number of reasons.
“We do a ton of drug cases. It’s a significant part of our caseload,” Stewart said. “We see all of the drug or alcohol and other societal problems.”
She said she’s seen apartments become flophouses where a “tenant’s associates can show up, hang out and find a place to sleep” without the landlord unaware what’s going on.
Steward represents landlords at the Landlord and Tenant Tribunal Boards because she says while tenants can get free representation, landlords can’t.
“Sometimes, because the tenant went to jail, the landlord thinks he can change the locks,” she said. “But the tribunal board is there for a reason, to terminate tenancies. Nobody else can do that.
“So just because your tenant is in jail, or not paying rent for some reason, that doesn’t mean the agreement can be terminated.”
The legal paperwork landlords are required to complete can be daunting, Stewart said, and tenant evictions very much rely on the ‘very high threshold of proof’ landlords must submit to the tribunal.
Stewart said when criminal charges are pending against a tenant, having the arresting police officer attend the tribunal is often the proof the tribunal requires.
“If there are reasonable grounds (presented), a conviction would stick,” she said.
Landlord Nancy Lowe knows a little about dealing with unruly tenants.
After checking all three tenants’ references and meeting their parents, the Barrie woman allowed the three twentysomethings to move into her rental property on Campbell Avenue a few years ago. She said the tenants punched holes in the walls, destroyed the rug, scraped enamel off the bathtub and broke the glass patio doors and several windows.
Two years later, Lowe has been in and out of court and finally garnisheed the wages of one of her former tenants — to the tune of $21,300.
“I had to get the judge to order the parents to serve them,” Lowe said. “My advice to landlords is, stick with it. It’s a lot of legwork, but I didn’t give up and got the money they owed, plus my expenses back.”
In the meantime, the deGroots are responsible for hiring a pest control company to rid the apartment of fleas because that’s not covered under their fire damage policy. - Cheryl - Barrie Examiner

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Ontario Landlords and Tenants

I'm going to post below an excerpt from a well connected and established mortgage broker here in Barrie who has owned multiplexes. His post is an excellent reason to showcase why it is so important to use those that specialize with Rentals. Not just someone that wears many hats and does not work specifically with Tenants on a daily basis. Why? Read below. There are some great tenants, don't get us wrong but get the wrong one? It will turn you off real estate investing and the reason why you will hear of "tenant horror stories". Who would you rather entrust your property with? (This is why it is our mandate at Shannon Murree and Team of RE/MAX Chay Realty Inc Brokerage in Barrie to work with Landlords to rent the properties and longstanding history of over 14 years. Why? We are real estate investors ourselves.) Ontario Landlord's perspective:
‎*Just curious, in today's climate for you Ontario LLs, how many months a typical loss ends up being? (not counting legal and sheriff fees, etc.)* Here is a typical example: This tenant only gave one month's rent ($1000) on move in: Rent is due on the first late on the second. On the second, you serve an N4 notice to the tenant to pay the rent owing, or move within 14 days. *If tenant moves out, you are out one months rent.* *If tenant does not pay or move in 14 days, you file an app with the LTB, if you are lucky, you get a hearing by the end of that rental month. If tenant shows up, several things can happen at the hearing: Tenant has real good excuse why he is late with rent (example job loss), so the adjudicator will force you to keep tenant on a payment plan. The arrears he owes you will be added in increments of $200 a month along with upcoming month's rent for the next 5 months. NOWHERE IS IT ALLOWED TO BE STIPULATED IF THEY DEFAULT, EVICTION IS IMMEDIATE! *If he doesn''t pay next month's rent along with the extra $200, you must file again with the board (it's free this time) and usually the tenant doesn't get a notice of hearing nor do you have to provide them with one. *The hearing date you get may be in 2 weeks if you are lucky (we are now into second month of no rent being paid) *At the hearing you explain your case to the adjudicator that tenant defaulted on a hearing order payment plan. So the adjudicator prepares a hearing order for eviction which is good in ten days (or it could be immediate-not sure) The hearing order gives the tenant 10 days to move out or landlord will hire sheriff. *Tenant gets this in the mail, they don't move out in ten days so you must hire the sheriff to evict on day eleven. *After hiring sheriff, within a few days sheriff goes and posts move out letter to tenant giving them another couple of days to move out. Tenant still does not move out. Sheriff comes back in a week to physically evict. Then you must keep tenant belongings for 3 days before disposing. I think this added up to three months. Add another month if they don't show for first hearing and filed for a review hearing (which will be granted) Add another month if your hearing dates are later (like 4 weeks after filed app instead of 2) or you call sheriff at Xmas (they won't evict for 2 weeks around xmas and this creates a backlog) Minus one month if you had received first and last month's rent from this tenant. Cost for hearings is $150, cost for sheriff $350. Cost for a paralegal to represent you is $400. Haven't even included damages or your time and aggravation as a landlord. But you go in to inspect for damages and the place is trashed. Thousands of dollars in cleanup and repair. YOU CANNOT FILE AN APPLICATION FOR DAMAGES BECAUSE HE IS NO LONGER YOUR TENANT! So you now have three months rent owing ($3000) plus $500 in fees to evict, $400 legal fees plus damages. Your ex tenant has flown the coup, so could be very hard to collect from them. But when you do have a hearing order with an amount for arrears of rent (and filing costs), it can be transferred to a small claims judgement (approximately $75) and you can fill out garnishment forms if they are worth garnishing and you know where they bank and/or work (for $100). These fees are added to the total judgement amount. Sometimes tenants that disappear, reappear on the radar. A small claims judgement is good for seven years and then you can renew it. It will also appear on their credit report. So as a landlord in order to recoup this cost you raise your rent for the next tenant and raise it every year and keep it high forever just in case this happens again.