Landlords and Tenants
Today I will answer a question that touches upon several legal topics including landlord/tenant, fixtures, legal rights to chattel, and small claims court.
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Landlords and Tenants
First, a disclaimer: Although I am an attorney, the legal information in this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for seeking personalized legal advice from an attorney licensed to practice in your jurisdiction. Further, I do not intend to create an attorney-client relationship with any listener.
Today I will answer a question that touches upon several legal topics including landlord/tenant, fixtures, legal rights to chattel, and small claims court. Jade from Cambridge, Massachusetts wrote:
On my moving day August 31st this year, I had to leave my dryer (one in good working condition) at the rental apartment I was moving out of. The truck I used for the move was too loaded to take the dryer along. I said to my roommate then that I will return to pick up the dryer a few days later. She agreed. Since September, she has ignored almost all my email and phone messages regarding my pick-up requests of the dryer. The one reply I received from her says that I should’ve picked up the dryer the day after the move. I have also emailed the landlord about it and he ignored my email as well. (My previous roommate and the landlord are good friends with each other.) I do not owe any rent or bills on the apartment. Is it legal for my previous roommate to not release my dryer just because I didn’t move it out on moving day or the day after? What legal steps could I take to get my dryer back without having to spend more money than the value of the dryer?
The next issue is whether Jade abandoned her property in the rental unit when she left. Normally, any personal property left behind in a rental unit after a tenancy terminates becomes the property of the owner. However, if the tenant communicates an intent to return for the personal property, then the property has not been abandoned. Jade did not simply abandon the dryer. She told her roommate that she would return for it, the roommate agreed, and so Jade did not abandon it to the roommate. The landlord might argue that Jade abandoned the property because she never informed him that she would return to take the dryer. This argument would likely fail because Jade did express an intent to return for the dryer, and abandonment requires a strong showing of an intent to wholly and permanently divest oneself of property. Further, if the property is still being rented, then the landlord does not have a current right to enter the unit and take property anyway.