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How Can I Get My Roommate to Leave?

How Can I Get My Roommate to Leave?

How Can I Get My Roommate to Leave?

Dave, How can I get my roommate to leave?He continues to possess the same type of behavior is most common when relations aren’t working out. – Paying rent late, having friends over during hours when everyone is sleeping at 3 am, being loud, skipping out on doing dishes, etc.  My roommate and I didn’t sign any agreements or conditions of him living here, nor did he provide any security deposit initially during the time of move-in.  I feel I am not able to find a rational reason to evict him even after talking to him that it’s best that he finds other living arrangements.  He says he’s not budging, but integrates all of these passive-aggressive tactics so that I no longer want to be living with him.  Any options you may have aside from hiring a lawyer?

DETAILS:

For 22 years, I rent a one bedroom apartment in the City of West Hollywood, CA.  The apartment  is regulated by the Rent Stabilization Ordinance (RSO).  There must be a Just Cause from the Property Management to reasonably evict a tenant.  The 16-unit apartment  was built in 1950, I am 49 years old male that is not disabled and currently live with my roommate who was at some point my domestic partner.  We recently have drifted apart and only use the domestic document to  for him to live with me as a family member.  I am the solely responsible for the terms of my lease.

I just would like to take the time to applaud you for the information you provide to the readers of your site.  What stands out to me are your detailed responses that empower a renter and their tenancy.

Thank you for your kind remarks. I receive calls from all over the nation and, to the extent I can, I try to provide tenants with local resources to help them deal with their local laws. As you might imagine, some of my calls come from places where most people think slavery is still legal, let alone that renters may have any rights at all. I enjoy writing this column and responding to readers because it keeps me on my toes. So it’s good to hear from you in West Hollywood, where you have an extensive rent ordinance that’s easily accessible online.

As you know, The West Hollywood Rent Ordinance requires that a tenant be evicted for a just cause:

  • Nonpayment of rent;
  • Creating a nuisance or using a rental unit for illegal purposes;
  • Subleasing without the landlord’s permission;
  • Failure to provide the landlord with reasonable access;
  • Violating written terms of tenancy with certain exceptions under the Ordinance (see below);
  • Failure to renew a lease if given proper notice to renew before the lease-term expires and the lease has gone month-to-month.
  • Termination of employment for an on-site manager or other employee who was given the unit as part of his or her employment and was not a tenant on the same property prior to employment.

The site also contains an information page called Having a Roommate, which states in part:

“When a tenant accepts rent from a roommate in West Hollywood, the roommate is the tenant’s subtenant and has a right to the protections under the Ordinance that a tenant has. Thus, a tenant may not:

  1. ask a subtenant to leave the unit without having cause under the Ordinance and without following the procedures for evicting a tenant;
  2. ask a subtenant to pay more than the Maximum Allowable Rent on a unit;
  3. increase a subtenant’s rent by more than the annual general adjustment each year and not above the tenant’s MAR in any case;
  4. increase the security deposit after a subtenant’s move-in or charge fees not allowed under the Ordinance.”

We have a similar requirement in San Francisco, except that a Master Tenant may evict a roommate without just cause only if, prior to commencement of the tenancy, the Master Tenant informs the roommate in writing that the tenancy is not subject to the just cause provisions of the Rent Ordinance. Rent Board Rules and Regulations § 6.15C.

As a long-time tenant, I understand your conundrum and I empathize with you, but as you may know, I’ve taken the blood oath to never represent master tenants seeking to evict their roommates. And that includes giving advice on the subject.

It sounds to me like you have tried to be rational with him, to no avail. If you find a lawyer, it’s likely you’ll end up with a landlord lawyer who will encourage you to cook up a just cause eviction like, maybe, nuisance because your roommate parities with his friends until 3:00 a.m. Let me tell you, that can get real sleazy, real fast, not to mention, costly. I would not advise you to try to go to the owner or property manager because they will see your complaint as as opportunity to get rid of you both.

I’m fairly certain you don’t want to move, given the length of you rent-controlled tenancy. However, it may be time to consider the psychological cost of living in your current situation. Place a dollar amount on that cost, if you can, and ask yourself, “Can I find another, similar place for the rent I’m paying plus that cost?”

Of course, you can also use that same methodology to figure out how much to offer your roommate to move out, adding what it would cost you to hire a lawyer. As Tom Gray of the Brains said before Cyndi Lauper, “Money changes everything.”

She said I’m sorry baby I’m leaving you tonight
I found someone new he’s waitin’ in the car outside
Ah honey how could you do it
We swore each other everlasting love
She said well yeah I know but when
We did; there was one thing we weren’t
Really thinking of and that’s money

If your roommate accepts your offer, get a general release of all claims from him in writing.

Call the Tenant Lawyers now for a free consultation.
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Adding Roommates to Your Lease is Much Easier These Days

Adding Roommates to Your Lease is Much Easier These Days

Adding Roommates to Your Lease is Much Easier These Days

Since I began practicing as a tenant lawyer, I have always been appalled that a landlord could evict a tenant for “illegal” subletting (adding a roommate without permission). I maintain that it’s not a landlord’s business to approve of a subtenant as long as the original tenant keeps paying the rent and doesn’t burn down the building.

“It doesn’t make sense to give the landlord a say in picking your roommate. The original tenant or tenants are still responsible for paying the rent. The landlord retains all of his remedies to collect and to repossess the unit if the rent isn’t paid. Yet, in San Francisco the landlord is allowed to evaluate a potential roommate’s credit score; old bankruptcies; past unlawful detainers and anything else that could be argued to be relevant. The law isn’t clear on what is relevant.”

Over the years I’ve answered many questions from tenants asking about adding a roommate, like this one from 2014:

“I recently came across this post from 2011. I’m facing a similar situation (though haven’t gotten to the stage of asking my landlord yet, just want to know my rights before I start the process). I live in a 2-bedroom, rent-controlled apartment, and I’m the only one on the lease. My lease forbids subletting and says I need the landlord’s permission to add occupants.

 

My boyfriend would like to move in with me so we can both save on rent. I’ve seen references to a law passed in 2009 that you can add roommates even if the lease forbids it. How does that law factor into the response you gave in the article above?

 

The 2009 law, referenced in the Los Angeles Times article linked to your question, would have barred landlords from increasing rent above 33% of a tenant’s income and allowed tenants to add roommates other than family members to help pay rent. It was passed by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors on June 23, 2009. The law was later vetoed by Mayor Gavin Newsom, the rapacious, oily narcissist and shill for the real estate industry, who could occasionally squeeze out a crocodile tear for tenants. Now Lt. Governor, this “liberal” Democrat personifies Democrats everywhere. If you feel smoke blowing up your ass, it’s because your house is burning down.”

I explained the current law, hoping that the tenant had sublet the unit in the past with the landlord’s knowledge and consent. But essentially I had to conclude, given the state of the law at the time, “If your boyfriend isn’t replacing a former roommate, you might be better off marrying him.” Embarrassing, especially in San Francisco in 2014!

In 2015, the most important legislation for tenants adding a roommate in San Francisco came in the form of the “Kim Amendments.”

Supervisor Jane Kim, currently running for mayor, authored and championed the Kim Amendments or Rent Ordinance 2.0, (I would enthusiastically support Ms. Kim’s candidacy, if she renounced her membership in the Democrat Party, but that’s the topic for a separate discussion.)

Essentially the Kim Amendments amended Rent Ordinance § 37.9(a)(2) to include that a landlord cannot evict a tenant, despite provisions in a lease stating otherwise, for  adding a roommate to a rental unit so long as the maximum number of occupants does not exceed the lessor of two persons in a studio unit, three persons in a one-bedroom unit, four persons in a two-bedroom unit, six persons in a three-bedroom unit, or eight persons in a four-bedroom unit; or the maximum number permitted in the unit under state law and/or other local codes such as the Building, Fire, Housing, and Planning Codes. Because the Building, Housing, Fire and Planning Codes use a person per square foot calculation, they are often more lenient. One can almost always safely assume that the occupant per bedroom standard will apply.

The landlord cannot unreasonably refuse a tenant’s written request for adding a roommate. If the landlord fails to respond to the tenant’s request  in writing within 14 days of receipt of the tenant’s written request shall be deemed approved by the landlord. Nor can the landlord refuse based on the proposed additional occupant’s lack of creditworthiness, if that person will not be legally obligated to pay some or all of the rent to the landlord—meaning that unless the landlord wants to put the subtenant on the lease (and they never do), he can’t ask for credit reports or references.

Moreover, Rent Ordinance § 37.9(a)(2)(D) provides that a landlord must serve a 10-day notice to cure to evict a tenant for illegal subletting. If served tenant can cure by simply requesting in writing with 10 days, to add the offending roommate and avoid an unlawful detainer (eviction lawsuit) altogether.

So how would I answer the question today?

I would remind the reader that Lt. Governor Gain Newsom still remains a rapacious, oily narcissist and shill for the real estate industry, who can occasionally squeeze out a crocodile tear for tenants—a typical “progressive” Democrat politician.

And I would refer her to either Rent Board Rules & Regulations § 6.15A (absolute subletting prohibition in the lease) or § 6.15B (lease requiring landlord’s written consent to subletting).

I would advise her to write the landlord to request the addition of her boyfriend and wait to see if he responds at all or tries to refuse permission. In most case, that will be the end of the process, as most blanket refusals will be deemed unreasonable.

I would point out that the landlord cannot unreasonably refuse permission unless the boyfriend has intentionally misrepresented significant facts on the landlord’s standard form application or provided significant misinformation to the landlord that interferes with the landlord’s ability to conduct a typical background check; or where the landlord can establish that her boyfriend presents a direct threat to the health, safety or security of other residents of the property; or her boyfriend presents a direct threat to the safety, security or physical structure of the property.

In other words, if the landlord could prove that her boyfriend was a liar, a sex offender or a firebug, the landlord could refuse permission. I would also suggest that my reader think twice about adding her boyfriend to the tenancy if he had any of those particular traits.

Finally, if the landlord insisted upon unreasonably refusing to add the boyfriend to the tenancy, I would advise my reader to file a decrease in services petition at the Rent Board to reduce her rent by half.

Whew! No more need for me to assert the Victorian implication that San Francisco requires partners to be married for legal cohabitation! Thanks, Jane.

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3 Tenant Troubles–Roommate Rousting, Co-Tenant Challenges, Condo Craziness

3 Tenant Troubles–Roommate Rousting, Co-Tenant Challenges, Condo Craziness

3 Tenant Troubles–Roommate Rousting, Co-Tenant Challenges, Condo Craziness

Three Tenant Troubles in one.

I’m the master tenant in my three-bedroom apartment. Me and one other roommate are unhappy with the third roommate for a number of reasons I won’t get in to (none of which fall under the “just cause” list for reasons for eviction). She’s a headache and a mess but she does pay her rent.

I don’t believe she signed a lease when she moved in. I can’t find a copy of it in my files.

My landlord gave me permission to sublet and told me that the subletters don’t have the same rights for eviction and I can ask them to leave at any time without just cause. If we want to ask the third roommate to leave is that true?

Have you ever heard the old adage, “Free advice is worth the price”? Getting eviction advice from your landlord is like getting dating advice from that uncle who’s spent most of his adult life in prison–your landlord wants to evict anything that moves. San Francisco Rent Board Rules & Regulations §6.15C(1) is clear on this point:

For any tenancy commencing on or after May 25, 1998, a landlord who is not an owner of record of the property and who resides in the same rental unit with his or her tenant (a “Master Tenant”) may evict said tenant without just cause as required under Section 37.9(a) only if, prior to commencement of the tenancy, the Master Tenant informs the tenant in writing that the tenancy is not subject to the just cause provisions of Section 37.9.

If you do not have a sublease with your roommate, you’ll have to make like the late Rodney King and try to get along.

Remember, I will not represent nor will I provide advice to master tenants seeking to evict their subtenants.

I am named on the lease in the SF rent controlled building where we currently rent (Tenancy since 1979!).

My co-tenant is not named on the lease, but has been my co-tenant from February 1993, well before implementation of Costa Hawkins.

If I were to leave, would my co-tenant therefore be protected from egregious rent increases per your article, “Another Tenant Screwed By Costa Hawkins“?

Yes, your co-tenant would be protected because he or she has a tenancy created before the enactment of Costa Hawkins.

Your co-tenant must be able to prove that fact. Start to gather records that show your co-tenant occupied the unit with the landlord’s consent before 1996. Get voter registration documents, driver’s license information, old PG&E bills–any documents that corroborate residence dated prior to 1996. For good measure, if you still have them, collect old Christmas cards with post marked envelopes.

We live in the a 595-unit condo complex constructed in 2005.

We rented our condo in The Beacon from the condo’s owner in July 2012. We signed a one year lease and have been month-to-month since July 2013. Our landlord emailed us just before New Year’s Eve to let us know he planned to list the condo for sale. He expressed interest in selling to us if we are interested, especially since the buyer may not want to continue renting the unit. We told him to let us know that asking price for the unit and to please give us proper legal notice once he has more information.

Since receiving this information, we have not heard from the landlord again. His realtor emailed saying they are finalizing the sale price and will be in touch.

We are exploring our options to buy in San Francisco, but have recently discovered that due to an ongoing lawsuit between the building owners and the developer/architect, lenders will not give mortgage loans for the Beacon, our lender included.

Now that we know we cannot buy the unit we live in, regardless of the sale price, we would like to know what our rights are as tenants. Our lease states that once our lease goes to month-to-month after the term of our one-year lease, the landlord must give us 60 days notice of an eviction and we must give him 30 days notice if we are to move.

As of yet, we have not received any “official” notice, just mention that he plans to sell.

What are our rights at this point? Anything we should know that is to our advantage or does he just have to give us 60 days notice…and that’s it?

That’s it.  You have a right to a 60 day notice but nothing else.

Welcome to California’s version of tenant rights–no just cause evictions. They have ‘em in New Jersey and a few other state

Call the Tenant Lawyers now for a free consultation.
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My Landlord Wants Me To Add My Boyfriend To My Lease. Do I Have To?

My Landlord Wants Me To Add My Boyfriend To My Lease. Do I Have To?

My Landlord Wants Me To Add My Boyfriend To My Lease. Do I Have To?

I moved into the apartment I’m renting about six months ago. The building was constructed in the 1950’s and there are two apartment units in my building. I’m paying $4000 for the two bed, two bath apartment and $150 for a garage/parking space. The other building tenant and I split the cost of the water bill and trash bill and we each pay our own gas & electricity directly.

The landlord made a big production of verifying my employment, salary, and credit history (all are in good shape) before agreeing to rent the apartment to me and I’m the sole tenant on the lease.

Since I moved in, I’ve always paid my rent and my 1/2 of the water bill on time. As God is my witness, I’ve been a quiet, low-maintenance tenant.

My landlord has a real bee in her bonnet with me and I’m not quite sure why. My boyfriend moved in with me after I signed the lease. It’s a wonderful development in our relationship. But the landlord has identified that he’s there full time (not sure how) and has twice asked that he becomes a tenant on the lease agreement. There is a clause in my lease about getting landlord approval for any guests who stay over 30 days, but the lease also later differentiates between guests and domestic partners, so I feel like it’s a little vague.

I explained to my landlord that I was happy to comply with any legal requirements that I had, but that I wanted to take sole responsibility for my obligations under the lease and that I saw no reason to add my boyfriend to it. I’ll add – he’s a nice, straight-laced kind of guy and my landlord met him and was very pleasant to him, so it’s not like I’ve got some drug fiend who I’m occasionally hooking up with holed up in the extra bedroom . So my question is, am I under any obligation to add my boyfriend to the lease?

Have you heard the old proverb, “Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth?” A useful reminder of the meaning of the saying can be found in The Phrase Finder:

As horses develop they grow more teeth and their existing teeth begin to change shape and project further forward. Determining a horse’s age from its teeth is a specialist [sic] task, but it can be done.

The advice given in the ‘don’t look…’ proverb is: when receiving a gift be grateful for what it is; don’t imply you wished for more by assessing its value.

Simply put, you are not required to accept your landlord’s offer to put your boyfriend on the lease, but it may be the only way to legally establish his residence in the building.

You don’t want to add your boyfriend to the lease. You prefer that he resides in the unit as a subtenant, that his lease is with you rather than the landlord. In other words you will be subletting the extra bedroom to him. I still speak to many tenants who don’t understand that adding a roommate is a form of subletting. Many tenants still believe that subletting only occurs when one temporarily rents an entire unit to person. Not true.

You have not provided the language in your lease that limits or prohibits your ability to sublet, so I’m going to assume that your lease is fairly standard and prohibits subletting without the written consent of the landlord.

In that case, because the building is subject to the Rent Control Ordinance, your ability to obtain the landlord’s reasonable consent is governed by Rent Board Rules & Regulations §6.15A. Your issues is the same as the one I recently discussed in “Did Gavin Newsom Make It Harder For My Boyfriend To Move In With Me?” You aren’t making a one-for-one replacement of a roommate. While there is an argument to be made that you should be able to rent the second bedroom, it doesn’t fall squarely within the statute. Perhaps you could construe the landlord’s offer to add the boyfriend to lease as an acceptance of his subtenancy, but that’s a stretch.

The difference is that you’re not ready to marry this guy yet. That’s an important distinction to make. If you add your boyfriend to the lease, he becomes a co-occupant. What if you break up and he doesn’t want to move out? You can’t evict him and he can’t evict you. Potential problem.

Read Rent Board Rules and Regulations §6.14. Whenever I decide to reread the regulation I rent a cabin in a very remote area for a weekend. I bring extra copies of the statute and my 357 Magnum. I read the rule for awhile, then I take a copy out back and use it for target practice. Then I read for awhile and repeat. By Sunday I think I understand it.

Then I suggest you revisit the issue with the landlord. Thank her for offering to add your boyfriend to the lease. Tell her that it’s more beneficial to her to allow you to add your boyfriend as a subtenant, a subsequent occupant. In the unlikely case that you move out, the landlord would be stuck with your boyfriend and she could not increase the rent. Tell the landlord you would gladly accept service of a 6.14 notice, informing your boyfriend in case you vacate, he will be subject to a rent increase to market rate.

The landlord should be delighted…unless she wants to evict you for illegal subletting because she can increase the rent to $10,000.00 a month. Isn’t that the going rate for a two-bedroom in North Beach?

Call the Tenant Lawyers now for a free consultation.
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Did Gavin Newsom Make It Harder For My Boyfriend To Move In With Me?

Did Gavin Newsom Make It Harder For My Boyfriend To Move In With Me?

Did Gavin Newsom Make It Harder For My Boyfriend To Move In With Me?

I recently came across this post from 2011. I’m facing a similar situation (though haven’t gotten to the stage of asking my landlord yet, just want to know my rights before I start the process). I live in a 2-bedroom, rent-controlled apartment, and I’m the only one on the lease. My lease forbids subletting and says I need the landlord’s permission to add occupants.

My boyfriend would like to move in with me so we can both save on rent. I’ve seen references to a law passed in 2009 that you can add roommates even if the lease forbids it. How does that law factor into the response you gave in the article above?

The additional “catch” in my situation is that my boyfriend has 50% custody of his 2 kids, so they’d be living with us half the time. How do the kids impact the situation? If I go and ask permission to have my boyfriend move in, do I even need to mention the kids?

The 2009 law referenced in the Los Angeles Times article linked to your question would have barred landlords from increasing rent above 33% of a tenant’s income and allowed tenants to add roommates other than family members to help pay rent. It was passed by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors on June 23, 2009.

The law was later vetoed by Mayor Gavin Newsom, the rapacious, oily narcissist and shill for the real estate industry who could occasionally squeeze out a crocodile tear for tenants. Now Lt. Governor, this “liberal” Democrat personifies Democrats everywhere. If you feel smoke blowing up your ass, it’s because your house is burning down.

You don’t mention if you had roommates in the past. If you did, the process to add your boyfriend would be fairly straightforward. San Francisco Rent Board Rules & Regulations §6.15B provides the procedure for adding a subtenant if the roommate is a one-for-one replacement  of an outgoing roommate. Rent Ordinance §37.9(a)(2)(A) states:

Provided that notwithstanding any lease provision to the contrary, a landlord shall not endeavor to recover possession of a rental unit as a result of subletting of the rental unit by the tenant if the landlord has unreasonably withheld the right to sublet following a written request by the tenant, so long as the tenant continues to reside in the rental unit and the sublet constitutes a one-for-one replacement of the departing tenant(s).  If the landlord fails to respond to the tenant in writing within fourteen (14) days of receipt of the tenant’s written request, the tenant’s request shall be deemed approved by the landlord.

If your boyfriend isn’t replacing a former roommate, you might be better off marrying him.

The Rent Ordinance allows a tenant to add family member, spouse or domestic partner to the tenancy. Rent Ordinance §37.9(a)(2)(B) also provides:

A landlord’s reasonable refusal of the tenant’s written request may not be based on the proposed additional occupant’s lack of creditworthiness, if that person will not be legally obligated to pay some or all of the rent to the landlord.

With respect to your children, you can also add them to the tenancy under Rent Ordinance §37.9(a)(2)(B) as long as the total number of occupants does not exceed the maximum number of occupants stated in the ordinance. If you case, the maximum allowable number of occupants is four (4) for a two-bedroom unit, so that shouldn’t be a problem.

Maybe it’s time to reintroduce the 2009 amendment to understand if the current Supes have any guts and to see how Mr. Lee treats the legislation if it passes.

Call the Tenant Lawyers now for a free consultation.
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Can My Landlord Refuse To Add My Domestic Partner To My Lease?

Can My Landlord Refuse To Add My Domestic Partner To My Lease?

Can My Landlord Refuse To Add My Domestic Partner To My Lease?

How to add my domestic partner to the lease?

I have been the only tenant (master tenant) of my rent controlled studio apartment in San Francisco. I moved in alone in July 2009. The building is from the 1930s and there are at least 30 units. I pay $961, up from $920 at move-in.The most recent rental ad that I saw for a similar unit to mine in the same building shows they are renting for about $1600 now. I looked at my lease and as expected the no subletters detail is in bold print.

My boyfriend has been staying with me informally for a few months, and  only the internet bill is in his name as he wanted to get us better internet service. He also changed his address to mine with the US Postal Service and DMV for his drivers license. His name was not on the lease at his previous apartment, he just rents a room there before our relationship got serious.

Just this week we filed a domestic partnership at SF City Hall. I then emailed the property management company, called The Douche Gang, saying that I’d like to add my domestic partner. They replied that he has to apply and pay the application fee and show proof of income.

This was expected but I’m  nervous because the online info I find is that they can’t deny a domestic partner unreasonably, but if this company is bent on removing me to get a market value renter than how do we know what is considered reasonable? My boyfriend has an old debt to a landlord in Seattle from miscellaneous fees and penalty for painting that unit. I know he can’t be denied for credit reasons but what if it was apartment rental related? As you seem to be aware, San Francisco Rent Ordinance §37.9(a)(2)(B) states in part:

[…] where a rental agreement or lease provision limits the number of occupants or limits or prohibits subletting or assignment, a landlord shall not endeavor to recover possession of a rental unit as a result of the addition to the unit of a tenant’s child, parent, grandchild, grandparent, brother or sister, or the spouse or domestic partner […] of such relatives, or as a result of the addition of the spouse or domestic partner of a  tenant […]

In other words, a tenant cannot be evicted for subletting to his or her spouse or domestic partner. The clause that you’re concerned with can be found in the same  section:

A landlord’s reasonable refusal of the tenant’s written request may not be based on the proposed additional occupant’s lack of creditworthiness, if that person will not be legally obligated to pay some or all of the rent to the landlord.

It’s highly unlikely that The Douche Gang will allow you to create a co-tenancy with your boyfriend, i.e., actually putting his name on the lease. Therefore, he is not obligated to pay any any rent to the landlord.

The Douche Gang cannot refuse to rent to your boyfriend based upon some debt he allegedly owed to a landlord in Seattle. (A landlord who is also a member of the Douche Gang,  judging by the facts you provide.)

Any refusal to rent based on a debt is a refusal based upon credit worthiness–an unreasonable refusal.

Personally, I don’t think landlords should be allowed to refuse consent to adding roommates at all. I also think the credit application fee is a scam.

But I don’t think you should challenge the application or the fee. You should simply remind The Douche Gang that they don’t have a right to refuse your boyfriend’s subtenancy.

Greedy douche baggery, it’s spreading like some kind of zombie virus! But, unlike the zombie movies, we have to remind ourselves that we tenants still outnumber the douches.

Call the Tenant Lawyers now for a free consultation.
(415) 552-9060

Oral Lease, May I Sublet A Room Using airbnb In My Apartment?

Oral Lease, May I Sublet A Room Using airbnb In My Apartment?

Oral Lease, May I Sublet A Room Using airbnb In My Apartment?

I live in a rent-controlled flat, where I have no written lease prohibiting subletting (I’ve lived here for 22 years). I don’t get along with the landlord, and he has pressured me for years to move out.

I have recently started using Airbnb to sublet a room in the flat. I continue living there. I have been using the rule of thumb that I have always used for longer term subletting, namely, I don’t earn more from a subletter than I pay in rent.

However, I’m now wondering if I’m breaking the law, and if my landlord could use this as an excuse to evict me (he’d jump at the chance).

What does the law say about this?

I get a lot of calls from tenants who have oral rental agreements with their landlords, concerned that they don’t have a written lease. If I ascertain that a caller has a rent controlled tenancy, I always say, “What’s the problem? You’ve got the best lease possible.”

Why? As you correctly state, there are no covenants–promises (terms)–in an oral lease. The only thing you have to do is pay your rent and pay it on the first of the month. An oral agreement rarely contains a promise to refrain from subletting.  California case law affirms that a landlord cannot evict a tenant for breach of an unwritten covenant in a lease.  Subletting your room should not be a problem.

Regardless of the rent charged, subletting your entire apartment on Airbnb could be construed as a violation of San Francisco Administrative Code § 41A, which prohibits the conversion of residential rent controlled units into transient hotel rooms. If you are simply finding roommates through Airbnb, there is no functional difference between finding a roommate there than on Craigslist or or any other venue that advertises for roommates. So you aren’t running afoul of the law or your rental agreement if you rent to a roommate you find on Airbnb.

None of my comments mean that I condone your actions. Your statement, “I don’t earn more from a subletter than I pay in rent,” seems to indicate that you are also profiting from your master tenancy. I take your statement to mean that your subletters pay the entire rent and you live in the flat for free. If that is the case, I think that you are using Airbnb to attract short-term tourists/roommates who don’t know or don’t care that they may have Rent Ordinance protections. If you really meant to say that you pay half the rent, please don’t take some of my comments personally.

You should not believe that you can rent to a series of short-term roommates without eventually violating the San Francisco Rent Ordinance. If one of your roommates decides to stay past the term of the sublease, you won’t have just cause to evict her. When she finds out about her rights under the Rent Ordinance, she will file a petition to reduce her share of the rent because you are overcharging her pursuant to Rent Board Rules & Regulations §6.15C.

If the landlord gets wind of your subletting on Airbnb, he may try to evict you despite the fact that your actions may be legal. It happens all the time. As you can see, the facts of you situation may not play well and you could find yourself in a trial. Do you really have the time and money to adequately defend yourself?

If my assumption that your subtenants pay your entire rent is correct, you are following the landlord playbook to skirt the Rent Ordinance and you’re a freaking tenant! Your landlord sees you as the greedy tenant from hell, preventing him from realizing a better return on his investment. You’re the poster tenant to whom all landlords point justifying repeal of our Rent Ordinance protections.

Just because the law characterizes you as a quasi-landlord doesn’t mean you have to act like a Cheese Ball landlord.

Call the Tenant Lawyers now for a free consultation.
(415) 552-9060