I want to keep my window open because it’s my preference. My landlord wants to keep it closed because they remotely controls the house’s A/C. They’ll walk right up to my room and slam it shut whenever they visits on random days to harass us about the kitchen looking like people live here.
- ms.lane@lemmy.worldEnglish3 hours
I mean, if they’ve got AC running and you have a window open you’re killing the efficiency for everyone, it’s sort of a dick move.
But if they didn’t have it running, they could just ask you nicely to close the window since they’re turning the AC on.
- 22 hours
You need to check on tenancy laws in your location.
It might not be considered trespassing, but it could be something else.
Here in the UK tenants have a right to “quiet enjoyment” as it is phrased in law, which means your landlord is not allowed to bother you unannounced, and if they want to come to the property they must give reasonable advance notice (usually 24 hours)
You may have something similar.
Then again, the landlord having remote-control over your A/C sounds like absolutely psycho behaviour already, so good luck with that.
davel@lemmy.mlEnglish
24 hoursThe answer hinges on law, which hinges on location, location, location, so you’re asking the wrong people.
eezeebee@lemmy.caEnglish
23 hoursLocation not specified; OP is presumed American until proven innocent.
eezeebee@lemmy.caEnglish
20 hoursI’m not a mind reader, it’s just easy to spot Americans online.
I would guess a state bordering one of the Great Lakes though.
AntiOutsideAktion@lemmy.mlEnglish
19 hoursIt’s California. I guess it’s alright to narrow it down to basically a country within a country
- 20 hours
In Australia that issue would fall under ‘quiet comfort’. I don’t think they’d be allowed to do that.
AntiOutsideAktion@lemmy.mlEnglish
20 hoursMy location also has such a line but there’s no such thing as a law when your landlord can respond within the law to punish you for enforcing your rights.
- 20 hours
If they are coming over in announced thats against ’ quiet comfort’ theyre not allowed to do that already. Closing the window is cherry on the cake
- 23 hours
I would physically beat the shit out of a landlord doing that. I am paying to use this property, it’s not yours to do ANYTHING with.
- 1 day
Put a stick in the window on the inside to hold it open, and a camera watching everything
- 21 hours
Nah, leave ketchup packets on the window sill with the outward facing end cut off.
AntiOutsideAktion@lemmy.mlEnglish
1 dayWhat if I want to find out this month and/or not spend 300 dollars?
Most law schools in the US and Canada offer free renters’ clinics. I’d recommend seeking one of those out.
Melllvar@startrek.websiteEnglish
1 dayProbably not criminal trespassing, since they are the owner of the property. It may fall under tenant harassment, unauthorized entry, constructive eviction, or other laws that pertain specifically to landlord/tenant relations.
Check to see if there are any local tenant’s rights or advocacy groups in your area that offer free legal consultations. They’d be able to advise you on the local tenant’s rights laws and whether they apply to your situation.
- 24 hours
If they remotely control the AC why wouldn’t the landlord just turn off the AC when the window was open? Seems more logical, tbh. Maybe that’s the escalation you mentioned youbwere worried about in another response.
AntiOutsideAktion@lemmy.mlEnglish
24 hoursI guess the escalation would come in a combination of becoming even more aggro, raising rent, and ‘evicting’ me aka not continuing my month to month lease.
Why haven’t you put a piece of wood in the window track yet? If you physically block the window, he can’t do it from the outside
AntiOutsideAktion@lemmy.mlEnglish
24 hoursBecause that would be an escalation they would without a doubt retaliate against, and it would be immediate rather than on my terms. I really do mean my landlord is a psycho. We have security cameras in the kitchen and written instructions on pieces of paper taped everywhere. When I first moved in they banged on my bedroom door to rant at me about other people having kitchen appliances they didn’t approve and leaving a pan out. “You know what happens when I find something like this left out? It goes in the trash!”
- 3 hours
You should definitely get a lawyer well versed in tenant rights. California has some of the most protective tenants rights in the US. From what you are describing I would not be surprised if a judge issues a temporary restraining order against the landlord to stay away from the property until things have been resolved.
- 21 hours
Idk where you live but if you are renting the entire unit it should be illegal to put a camera in the kitchen.
AntiOutsideAktion@lemmy.mlEnglish
21 hoursIt’s a house with multiple bedrooms, each of which have a letter taped to it as if the residential house were an apartment complex.
AntiOutsideAktion@lemmy.mlEnglish
19 hoursit’s a fucking wasteland if you need to keep rent under 900 dollars and don’t want to put your cats in a pound
- 19 hours
If you find some good comrades you can find a house to rent between 3-4 people and get under that for your share. At least I’m my area cause I’ve been looking
AntiOutsideAktion@lemmy.mlEnglish
17 hoursYeah that’s the rub isn’t it? I’m extremely atomized.
Kinda funny because some of the people in his house were planning something like that, but bad person.
- bolapara@lemmy.mlEnglish13 hours
So you’re renting a room in a house? Who pays for the electricity? Regardless of if you’re splitting the electricity amongst the tenants or the landlord is covering the electricity, I’d argue you’re the one being inconsiderate as you’re increasing the energy use and making others pay for it.
Not sure about the legality of the external shutting of the window though. You should have gotten a copy of the lease you signed and many places require that documentation to include a description of your and your landlords rights. You could start there.
But honestly that sounds like a terrible arrangement and I’d look for a different housing situation if you can.
- 23 hours
is a psycho. We have security cameras in the kitchen
I’m pretty sure a landlord can not do that legally most places
AntiOutsideAktion@lemmy.mlEnglish
23 hoursJust went out after they wrapped up their visit and the fucking psycho threw out all the mail that was sitting in the common area. Including a letter to someone here from the DMV.
- 22 hours
If you’re in the us that could be mail tampering or the like. You’re absolutely not supposed to mess with other people’s mail. That’s a federal no no
- 23 hours
You need to not live there anymore
AntiOutsideAktion@lemmy.mlEnglish
23 hoursI learned to put up with too much. But any kind of retaliation for any of this would probably just get me a 30 day notice to vacate so I’m envisioning it as more of a grenade I drop before I close the door behind me.
- 1 day
It really depends on where you live and if the landlord lives in the same housebut: are there clearly written rules in the lease about the windows needing to stay closed? If not it is likely not justifiable for them to close them. Typically a landlord needs to provide 24-48 hours notice to enter the unit so if they are showing up on random days and entering that it likely illegal. Throwing away personal property is also illegal. The security cameras could also be illegal. The only way to know any of this would be to contact a local housing justice non profit (if it exists) or preferably a local tenant lawyer. You need to make sure you are documenting everything that seems like a violation, even just writing a note of when and what happened but photos and video could be preferable
- 23 hours
yeah but the average person doesn’t know how to decipher legalese, won’t know how city vs county vs state laws interplay with each other nor would they know the established legal precedents or the way courts typically rule on certain types of cases. unfortunately the law might say one thing but in practice enforcing it might not ever happen in certain municipalities. having a free consultation with a legal expert is a much faster way to get the correct answer than scrolling through dozens of pages of legal texts to think you might have a cursory grasp on the subject matter
- 22 hours
Not everywhere offers that either. That’s the pitfalls of asking online. One may get hundreds of replies that aren’t helpful, to get one or a few that are. A lot of times I got zero useful replies in and of themselves, but useful in that they gave me another actionable idea.
- 22 hours
Generally speaking all tenant lawyers work on contingency fees, they will give a free consultation to see if the case if potentially worth enough money for them to take it and then if so take a 40% cut of whatever the case makes. Tenant lawyers would not exist otherwise because virtually no tenants can hire a lawyer up front. So unless there are literally no tenant lawyers in an area, there will be someone willing to give a free consultation since that is how the business model is designed.
No, they own the building. There would at least be a question if they entered your unit, but they didn’t.








