Hi, I have tenants that have moved out and have not given a forwarding address although I have repeatedly asked for this by email . Tenants also did not pay there last months rent . I will be claiming this from there deposit so will leave little of it left. They have left behind large amount of stuff (old tyres furniture etc looks mostly rubbish they dont want) in the house , garden ,and shed etc. Would fill a large skip . I have however found out where they have moved to . I am thinking of taking all there stuff left behind and delivering it into there new house front garden ? I am fed up with tenants leaving all there crap and unwanted items behind and having to clear up after them . Will i be breaking any laws etc by taking there stuff to them that they have left behind and putting in there front garden . Any recomendations on how to deal with this would be appreciated
Tenants leaving house full of rubbish / posesions behind
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Hopefully someone with legal background can respond, but i would imagine dumping all their crap on their front garden would get you in some sort of fly tipping trouble. Remember we are in the UK and the law protects the wrong people in most of these situations! Its having the balls to go do it if you can, then just say is wasn't you… theyd have to prove that it was. They need teaching a lesson…
can you not claim for a skip from their deposit?
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You have a really useful bit of information there - their new address.
Dumping their rubbish on them might seem like a good idea but in reality means loading & unloading and apart from being unprofessional, could cause you real problems! Put the rubbish where they can collect it then write to them at their new address giving them a time frame to remove the rubbish & telling them if they don't you will get a skip & bill them. Tell them iIf they don't pay that bill you will take them to court then do exactly that!
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Hi , Thanks for your replys , There will be very little of there deposit left as they have not paid there last months rent , Giving them time to remove the stuff will delay when i can re let the property and they will probably not clear it anyway and will just cause other losses ie loss of rent , council tax etc ,I think they have had enough time allready to clear everything. How long is reasonable time after end of tenancy date ?. Taking to court also takes a lot of time and costs to do this so is not realy practical as will incur more costs which may not be recovered . Easiest solution is to deliver all there stuff to there new address . If legal to do so ?. Maybee the loclal press or new landlord may get to hear about this which I am sure they wont like . Just get very frustated that this happens all the time as many landlords must experience . The deposit cap does not help as tenants dont pay last months rent and then have nothing to lose ?
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I'm not going to post a link because it would no doubt get blocked as Unapproved but there is a good video from 18 months ago where a farmer returned a load of fly-tipped tyres to their (allegedly) rightful owner. Google* "fly tipping tyres farmers revenge".
* Other search engines are availableThere is a fine line between irony and stupidity. If I say something absurd please assume that I am being facetious.
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Originally posted by lavy View PostHi , Thanks for your replys , There will be very little of there deposit left as they have not paid there last months rent , Giving them time to remove the stuff will delay when i can re let the property and they will probably not clear it anyway and will just cause other losses ie loss of rent , council tax etc ,I think they have had enough time allready to clear everything. How long is reasonable time after end of tenancy date ?.
What is a reasonable amount of time depends on what they've left behind.
If there's nothing in the tenancy agreement, it would probably be 2 or 4 weeks.
Taking to court also takes a lot of time and costs to do this so is not realy practical as will incur more costs which may not be recovered .
If this isn't paid, you can sue them for it.
It's easy, cheap and quite satisfying.
Easiest solution is to deliver all there stuff to there new address . If legal to do so ?.
Yes.
But if it damages that property (either the stuff being dumped or the garden), that could be a problem for you.
If you dump it and someone takes some of it, that could be a problem.
If they see you doing it and beat you up, they'd be committing an offence, but it might hurt.
The deposit cap does not help as tenants dont pay last months rent and then have nothing to lose ?
Rent owed is a black and white claim, unlike compensation for disposing of rubbish.
It's possible the tenants will pay the rent owed rather than risk a ccj.When I post, I am expressing an opinion - feel free to disagree, I have been wrong before.
Please don't act on my suggestions without checking with a grown-up (ideally some kind of expert).
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I would do an inventory of the things left (however bad it may be) after all someone's rubbish is someone else's treasury. Tell them to pick it up or it will be thrown away at their cost, most likely they wont turn up, so you put in a small claims for the cost and removal of their things as well as storage costs.
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Originally posted by jpucng62 View Postbeing unprofessionalThere is a fine line between irony and stupidity. If I say something absurd please assume that I am being facetious.
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As said, do not dump the rubbish on their new drive etc, it is a criminal offence and add the fact that when you are doing this anyone can come out of the house and hit you over the head with something which may either kill you or injure you....... there are many cases of this in the annals of history. Do as the others have said, get a skip and clear it and keep the invoices..... but take lots and lots of picutres.
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Section 34 of the EPA 1990 concerns fly tipping. I wouldn't regard placing someone's abandoned possessions on their own property as fly tipping (although not sure of the legal position / definitions).
The farmer I mentioned in post #5 was Stuart Baldwin. His land is in Haydock. That case was widely reported and he spoke to the media about what he had done. I haven't seen any suggestion that was fly tipping himself by moving the tyres to the alleged perpetrator's property, or that he faced any legal repercussions as a result.There is a fine line between irony and stupidity. If I say something absurd please assume that I am being facetious.
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by KTCUnless the divorce is finalised, which is not the impression I got reading OP's post, no she's not.
Unless the divorce is finalised, which is not the impression I got reading OP's post, no she's not. And as jpkeates said, not a squatter in any case.
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Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 17:14 PM -
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by bombataHi,
I have been renting a house to a couple for the past two years. Only the husband is on the tenancy agreement as the sole tenant. His wife just lived with him and does not work.
They decided to divorce- and it's messy they are not speaking to one another. The husband moved out...-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
30-06-2022, 19:26 PM -
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by Hudson01I agree, she may well call the Police...... when she returns, but the important thing is, she is OUTSIDE.
Now i can pretty much guarantee this - When the 3 years in PC comes to the door after the frantic 999 call, he or she will know practically zero about all the legislation surrounding...-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 16:49 PM -
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by DPT57I think that's more likely to scare her into calling the police, but to be honest it could just as easily go the way you describe....
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Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 16:36 PM -
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by DPT57It will be valid and the tenancy will end. Vacant possession is not a condition of a tenancy ending....
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Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 16:35 PM -
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by Hudson01If he does that will that not put her on '' warning '', she may then never leave the house un-occupied .........can the OP simply go in when the house in empty and change all the locks ? But it would have to be planned like the D Day landings....
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Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 16:33 PM -
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by AndrewDodBetter to let the husband know that his notice will not be valid if vacant possession is not supplied and all keys returned, and that the tenancy will not end and he will remain liable for rent. He will have given notice but not departed -- it is hardly up to the landlord to act as a spy to determine...
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Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 16:32 PM -
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Reply to Wife doesn't have right to resideby DPT57Because in my experience they're next to useless....
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01-07-2022, 16:31 PM -
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by BerlingogirlMy prospective tenant (T) has the right to rent here because he has an appropriate visa and he works in this country. He's been here nearly 4 1/2 years and is going to apply for British citizenship so he seems ok.
However, his wife (W) does not have the right to live here, is applying...-
Channel: Residential Letting Questions
30-06-2022, 11:31 AM -
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by DPT57You'd better ask the husband to let her know that she will be a trespasser when the tenancy ends and can be excluded.
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Channel: Residential Letting Questions
01-07-2022, 16:22 PM -
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