Jobless renter still on the hook for lease
'Cooperation and communication are essential'
By Robert Griswold, Thursday, April 9, 2009.Q: I recently signed a new lease on a beautiful rental home. However, I lost my job and am finding it very hard to pay my rent. I was wondering if there was a way to break my lease due to loss of job?
A: No, not unless you have a specific "lease break" clause for loss of your job or a job transfer or other similar reason. If not, then your only hope is that your landlord is voluntarily willing to allow you to break your lease. A lease is a legally binding contract and enforceable regardless of your employment or personal situation. What if the landlord lost his job? Would it be acceptable that he raise your rent during a fixed-term, fixed-rent lease just because something changed in his life? Of course not. Just as you would expect to rely on all terms of your lease, the landlord does too.
If you had any possibility that your job or personal situation might change at any time during the entire lease period, then you should have negotiated a lease-break clause or gone with a month-to-month rental agreement so that you aren't obligated under a long-term lease. Most likely you wanted the stability and maybe even lower rental rate offered by the landlord with the lease, but the risk you took was that you are locked in to this lease commitment.
In my opinion, leases are really to the benefit of tenants. You rarely see a landlord attempt to break or modify the lease because his circumstances have changed and he needs to move back into the rental for some reason. But most tenants will want out of their lease as soon as it is not in their best interest. The double standard is that your landlord cannot break your lease or raise your rent during the term of the lease, but the law provides that your landlord does have to mitigate or attempt to re-rent your rental unit if you vacate prior to the end of your lease.
Sorry about your job loss and I suggest you contact your landlord and work something out. Maybe you can help find another tenant and cooperate in showing your rental until you actually vacate. Cooperation and communication are essential at this time, and your landlord is likely to be more understanding and compassionate if you are honest and forthright and do everything you can to assist him in re-renting your apartment.
Q: I recently spoke to a friend who is planning to purchase a home. He found a great home and is ready to sign the purchase agreement, but the sellers are insisting that one of the conditions of the sale is that they be able to stay in the house on a month-to-month basis while awaiting the completion of their new home in another state. They will pay the first month's rent and a security deposit as a credit in the purchase transaction, and the month-to-month rental agreement will be a part of the contract submitted to the title company at closing. I told my friend that this is not a good idea because the occupants now become tenants and have all the rights provided to them under state laws, and my friend would have the responsibilities of a landlord. My friend states there has to be some provision to protect the buyer, because this practice is very common these days. ...CONTINUED
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Submitted by Jon Boyd on April 9, 2009 - 12:28pm.
One the lease question:
If your friend is responsible enough to be a homeowner he needs to be responsible enough to take the transaction seriously and talk to a local real estate attorney about the potential problems of being a landlord.
These transactions usually work out OK, but when there are problems the can be a very expensive and very, very stressful.
Good luck with your friend, he needs you!
Jon Boyd
Broker/Manager
The Home Buyer's Agent of Ann Arbor, Inc.
1908 W. Stadium Blvd. Ann Arbor, MI 48103
http://buyersagentannarbor.com