REMEDIES AVAILABLE
TO THE TENANT
What action may the
tenant take if the landlord breaches the agreement?
According to §47-8-27.1, if the owner breaches the rental agreement or
does not fulfill his or her obligations under the Uniform Owner-Resident Relations
Act, the tenant may either:
1) Terminate the Lease. If the breach consists of
material noncompliance with the rental agreement or noncompliance with
the Uniform Owner-Resident Relations Act that materially affects health
or safety, then the tenant may give the owner written notice of the acts
or omissions constituting the breach. The notice should state that the
rental agreement will terminate in seven days if the acts or omissions
constituting the breach are not remedied within that time. If the owner
does not make a reasonable effort to remedy the problems within those
seven days, the rental agreement is terminated, and the owner must return
the balance, if any, of prepaid rent or deposit to which the tenant is
entitled.
Or,
2) Abate the Rent. The tenant may assert a claim
for abatement of rent (see next question for details).
In addition, the tenant may sue to recover damages
or obtain an injunction against the landlord for any material noncompliance
by the owner with the rental agreement or the Uniform Owner-Resident
Relations Act. §47-8-27.1(C). If the tenant prevails, then the tenant
should also be awarded reasonable attorney’s fees and court costs. §47-8-48(A).
The complaining party has a duty to mitigate damages. §47-8-6(A).
The tenant may not give a seven-day notice and abate
the rent during the same rental period. §§47-8-27.1(A) and
-27.2(A) & (B).
Is the tenant allowed
to abate the rent when the landlord fails to fulfill his or her obligations?
If the landlord violates his obligations under §47-8-20(A)(1)-(6) (see
[and link to] What are the obligations of the landlord to the tenant? above),
in a manner other than a failure or defect in an amenity of the unit, the tenant
must give written notice to the owner of the conditions needing repair. §47-8-27.1(A).
(An amenity is a facility or area supplied by the owner that is not necessary
for the health and safety of the resident or the habitability of the dwelling
unit, such as a swimming pool or tennis court. §47-8-3(C).) If the landlord
does not remedy the conditions set out in the notice within seven days of the
notice, the tenant is entitled to abate rent as follows:
1) one-third of the pro-rata daily rent for each
day from the date the tenant notifies the landlord of the conditions
needing repair, through the day the conditions in the notice are remedied.
If the landlord does not make the repairs through the subsequent rental
period, the tenant may continue to abate the rent at the same rate until
the conditions are remedied; and
2) one hundred percent of the rent, if the dwelling
is uninhabitable and the tenant cannot stay there, for each day from
the date the resident notifies the landlord of the conditions needing
repair until the date the conditions are remedied.
§47-8-27.2.
If the tenant chooses the remedy
of abatement of the rent, then the tenant may not invoke an alternate
remedy under §47-8-27.1 (seven-day notice
and/or suit for damages) during that same rental period. §§47-8-27.1(A)
and -27.2(A) & (B).
Proceed to Exercise 3 >
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