Comment on Why does apartment management expect you to call the police over every tenant incident?
MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca 2 days agoWow, that’s uhhhh, an interesting take. If one tenant is too noisy, you want the building manager to install noise dampening somethings? And who determines if it’s too noisy, the landlord who’d have to pay for the renovations?
RIotingPacifist@lemmy.world 2 days ago
That’s the law in pretty much anywhere that derived their tenancy agreements from English law.
Sadly it is not common practice anywhere as you’re landlord violating your lease in such a way, it is difficult to get anything done about it, because ultimately you still need somewhere to live and getting out of your contract isn’t a win, in the way that your landlord getting out of his and rendering you homeless if you don’t agree to his terms is.
You can’t imagine, the guy taking 1/2 your paycheck having to actually earn that money?
MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca 2 days ago
Please feel free to share an example, because this seems like absolute nonsense.
RIotingPacifist@lemmy.world 2 days ago
guildofletting.com/…/the-implied-covenant-for-qui…
The right is usually used to protect against harassment from landlord, but it extends much further.
MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca 2 days ago
Neat, our tenancy laws pretty much borrow that word for word!
In this case, loud neighbouts, failure to act would mean not calling law enforcement.
Or letting the place deteriorate would generally count. But, most buildings are up to code etc and the landlord isn’t expected to install extra sound proofing above and beyond code.
chloroken@lemmy.ml 2 days ago
You sound like a landlord.