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2012年7月1日 星期日

Lets Have a Fine Time Landlords - Lets Get Fined!



Landlords letting property in England and Wales are more susceptible to fines than ever before, under the Localism Act 2011

Fail to register or protect your tenants' deposit - fine! Fined up to three times the value of the deposit that is! And fail to provide the prescribed information within 30 days of receipt of your deposit and you can be sued up to six years later, yes even following your tenants departure. So your ex tenants might find themselves in future penury, unable to buy a new car? "I know, now what is my old landlords name from five years ago? I'll get them to pay!" And pay they will. Pay day might take on a new meaning, deposit day.

Fail to market a property without attaching an EPC - another fine! And, you may no longer be a, "fit and proper person", to licence a property.

Fail to update a gas safety certificate - fine or worse! Go to jail, do not collect £200 instead pay many times more in compensation to your victims

Fail to Licence a Licensable property - fine! And, denied use of section 21 Accelerated Notice to Quit!

Fail to comply with Council Improvement Notice - fine or worse!

Fail to register for Data protection via ICO - fine!

Personally this is all just fine by me. As a landlord and letting agent, I am tired of being tarred with the same brush as non-compliant landlords.

Localism Bill 2010 from 15 November 2011 became Localism Act - a five part Act one of these parts - housing affects Deposits:


How will new rules affect landlords / agents?

Landlords accepting deposits will have tighter rules of compliance or face a minimum fee of 1 times the value of the deposit or up to three times the value for serious breaches. Starting to feel not so fine? There's more!

In addition, landlords can be sued for up to 6 years after the tenancy ends where landlords return deposits but, fail to provide the prescribed information and register deposits within 30 days.

And that's not all - the section 21 (Accelerated Notice to Quit) is not available to non-compliant landlords, so no sympathy from the courts if your tenants do not pay their rent!

This came into effect on 6 April 2012. Letting agents and landlords that do not take deposits are unaffected.

Deposits taken prior to the protection scheme was introduced are not regulated i.e. pre 6 April 2007 UNLESS you have renewed meantime.

No renewal means no need to register.

So a continuing periodic tenancy originating before 2007 is not required to be registered until renewed

Localism Act re EPCs:


A remnant from Hips, EPC rules changed from 6 April 2012

For now it is important that landlords and agents provide an EPC with all marketing material or face fines and loss of reputation.

From 2018 under the Green Deal any property with a certificate rating below 'E' will be banned from the lettings market. I.e. 'F' and 'G' will be un-lettable without additional work to raise the rating. Leydon Lettings have no properties rated as low as this so is unaffected




Bob Leydon. For more information, see author's website: http://www.leydonlettings.co.uk





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2012年1月19日 星期四

Procedures for Dealing With Disputes Between Landlords and Tenants Over Tenants' Deposits


Disputes over tenants' deposits have always been a thorny issue especially at the end of a tenancy. Disputes frequently arise when a tenant disagrees with a landlord or agent about the amount of the deposit withheld by the landlord. In the landlord's opinion there may be damage to the property far in excess of fair wear and tear. The tenant may and more often than not, disagrees.

To help resolve issues between tenants and landlords and their agents, three schemes have been introduced and these are as follows:

1. DEPOSIT PROTECTION SERVICE (DPS)

This service is a government backed scheme, free to use by landlords and agents and is the scheme used by most letting agents.

All relevant information is registered online, inc. name and email addresses of tenants and the money forwarded to the DPS. The DPS on receipt of these monies forward an email to the tenant confirming their Deposit registration, and Repayment ID No. Tenants along with agents/landlords can log onto website and check details. The agent/landlord are required to issue to the tenant a copy of prescribed information and terms and conditions.

2. TENANCY DEPOSIT SCHEME. (TDS)

This scheme is often used by high street agents who pay to belong to this scheme. They retain the money in a client account, and should have client money protection insurance.

Unfortunately, not all agents have this insurance and some well known high street names have disappeared with deposit monies. So if your agent is using this scheme make sure he has insurance. Again, they must issue you a certificate with terms and conditions fully explained.

3. Mydeposits. This is an insurance based scheme used by individual landlords or agents. The money is kept by the landlord/agent who has to pay a fee to register the deposit. The money is retained by the landlord/agent and must be held in a client account. You must be issued with certificate with terms and conditions fully explained.

For all of the three schemes, the agent/landlord has a maximum of 14 days from receipt of deposit to notify and issue the relevant certificate to the tenant. In all scenarios the tenant must have a certificate, terms and conditions of scheme, and have been made aware of how to retrieve the deposit at the end of the tenancy, or what to do in event of a dispute. There are penalties to the landlord for not complying. They cannot issue a Section 21 notice for repossession, if they have not protected the deposit, and can also be fined up to 3 times the deposit for not complying with scheme rules.

At the end of the tenancy deposit monies must be returned within 14 days, or in event of monies being withheld, tenants must be notified of the disputed amount within that time frame. Whatever scheme is in force, appropriate redress is available to the tenant as per the terms and conditions provided.

Facts

DPS said only 19.1% of disputes over tenants' deposits had gone wholly in favour of landlord/agent.

41.5% in wholly in favour of tenant. 39.4% in split awards.

Since 2007 DPS Protected a total of £1.1bn worth of deposits, which number two million, and had 8,929 adjudications.

Mydeposits and Tenancy Deposit Scheme found that most adjudications were in favour of tenants.

DPS is the popular choice for landlords, handling more deposits than Mydeposits. DPS has dealt with 250,000 landlords plus 20,000 agents acting on behalf of landlords.

TDS has 4,000 agents on its' books.

A recent article from Residential Property Investor May/June 2011 highlights the necessity to comply with all schemes' rules and particularly at the end of the tenancy when the tenant is claiming their monies back. There are important time scales to adhere to and many disputes are automatically awarded to the tenant if the agent/landlord has simply failed to respond within the timeframe. Once a tenant or landlord disagree on the deposit payout and agree to use the Alternative Dispute Resolution process, landlords have two weeks to make their case for withholding all or part of the monies. Kevin Firth, director of The Deposit Protection Service says "Agents are the worst offenders. Once it has been agreed to use alternative dispute resolution, it is astonishing how many go on holiday or simply ignore the timescale. As we say, time and time again, the deposit is the tenant's money. It is therefore for the landlord or agent to have to prove their case. If they don't then we simply pay out'.

A summary of the landlord's claim is sent to the tenant who has two weeks to dispute it. The tenants counter-case goes back to the landlord who has seven days to dispute this. Finally, the adjudicator investigates and makes the decision, based on the evidence. The adjudicator's evidence hinges on the inventory.

Having an understanding of how disagreements relating to the release of the deposit is handled, highlights the necessity of having correct paperwork in place, correct tenancy agreement, signed and dated, and a comprehensive inventory, also signed and dated by both tenant and agent. Ideally the inventory should be professionally produced and well laid out to enable an adjudicator to read and understand clearly the layout, condition and contents of that property, as they will rely on that document to make a decision. Photographs and videos are now often included as part of the inventory. These must be clearly labelled and identifiable and also verified by the tenant, or could be dismissed as evidence.




Clare Price is an experienced landlord and letting agent and works in the Guildford and Woking area. She owns a letting agency called Prime surrey Lets, visit her website at http://www.primesurreylets.co.uk

Clare is a member of the UK Association of Letting Agents and a member of the National Landlords Association and the Residential Landlords Association.

As a letting agent, my aim is to create good working relationships between tenants and landlords. I do this by offering a professional, cost effective and fair deal for both landlords and tenants.





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