Landlord Tenant Law
Landlord
and tenant law governs the rental of commercial and residential
property. It is composed primarily of state statutory
and common law. A number of states have based their statutory
law on either the Uniform Residential Landlord And Tenant
Act (URLTA) or the Model Residential Landlord-Tenant Code.
Federal statutory law may be a factor in times of national/regional
emergencies and in preventing forms of discrimination.
The
basis of the legal relationship between a landlord and
tenant is grounded in both contract and property law.
The tenant has a property interest in the land (historically
a non-freehold estate) for a given period of time. The
length of the tenancy may be for a given period of time,
for an indefinite period of time, (e.g., renewable/cancelable
on a month to month basis), terminable at any time by
either party (at will), or at sufferance if the agreement
has been terminated and the tenant refuses to leave (holds
over). If the tenancy is tenancy for years or periodic
the tenant has the right to possess the land, to restrict
others (including the landlord) from entering upon it,
and to sublease or assign the property. The landlord-tenant
agreement may eliminate or limit these rights. The landlord-tenant
agreement is normally embodied in a lease. The lease,
though not historically or strictly a contract, may be
subject to concepts embodied in contract law.
The
landlord-tenant relationship is founded on duties proscribed
by either statutory law , the common law, or the individual
lease. What provisions may be contained in a lease is
normally regulated by statutory law. Basic to all leases
is the implied covenant of quiet enjoyment. This covenant
ensure the tenant that his possession will not be disturbed
by someone with a superior legal title to the land including
the landlord. A breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment
may be actual or constructive. A constructive eviction
occurs when the landlord causes the premises to become
uninhabitable.
Housing
codes were established to ensure that residential rental
units were habitable at the time of rental and during
the tenancy. Depending on the state, housing code violations
may lead to administrative action or to the tenant being
allowed to withhold rent. The habitability of a residential
rental unit is also ensured by warranties of habitability
which are prescribed by common and/or statutory law. A
breach of the warranty of habitability or a covenant within
the lease may constitute constructive eviction, allow
the tenant to withhold rent, repair the problem and deduct
the cost from the rent, or recover damages.
Unless
the lease states otherwise there is an assumption that
the tenant has a duty to pay rent. State statutes may
provide for a reasonable rental value to be paid absent
a rental price provision. In commercial leases rent is
commonly calculated in part or whole as a percentage of
the tenants sales. Rent acceleration clauses that cause
all the rent to become due if the tenant breaches a provision
of the lease are common in both residential and commercial
leases. Summary eviction statutes commonly allow a landlord
to quickly evict a tenant who breaches statutorily specified
lease provisions. Self-help as a method of eviction is
generally restricted. Some states do not even allow it
for tenants who have held over after the end of a lease.
Landlords are also restricted from evicting tenants in
retaliation of action the tenant took in regards to enforcing
a provision of the lease or applicable law.
Federal law prohibits discrimination in housing and the
rental market.
.