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RIGHTS
& DUTIES OF TENANTS & LANDLORDS
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The
following information is the rights and duties of
the Tenants and Landlords in North Carolina as presented
by the North Carolina Bar Association in their pamphlet
titled "This is the Law Landlords and Tenants" and
available on their website www.ncbar.org.
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Your
Rights As A Tenant
As
long as you fulfill your legal duties and the requirements
of your rental agreement, you have the right to exclusive
possession of property you rent or lease for the term
of the rental agreement. However, even as you exercise
your basic right to privacy, your landlord may retain
in the lease a right to inspect your dwelling at reasonable
times and in a reasonable manner. If your landlord
does not live up to his duties as set by law and the
terms of the rental agreement, you have the right
to: (1)
complain to him, (2)
complain to appropriate government agencies, such
as your local building and health departments, (3)
exercise your rights under law or the rental agreement
which you have signed, (4) join with other tenants
to secure your rights. These rights may be exercised
without fear of eviction.
In
addition, if after reasonable notice, your landlord
fails to carry out his legal duties, you have the
right to move out of the dwelling you are renting,
thereby ending your rental agreement. Moreover, you
have the right to seek relief in court if the landlord
fails to fulfill his duties. If you seek relief in
court and the court decides in your favor, it may
reduce the amount of rent you must pay until the landlord
fulfills his duties, and/or award you money damages.
Tenants may not withhold rent payments in order to
force the landlord to fulfill his duties without the
permission of the court. If your rental agreement
was prepared by your landlord, the law provides that
in the event of a dispute between you and the landlord,
any unclear terms or conditions should be interpreted
in your favor.
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Your
Duties As A Tenant
As
a tenant you have an obligation:
(1)
To pay your rent as agreed and do other things required
by your lease.
(2)
To keep your home clean and safe. Get rid of trash
and garbage in a clean and safe way. Use the toilet,
sinks and baths in proper ways and keep them clean.
(3)
Not to damage or let any of your family or guests
damage your home. If you do, you are responsible and
the landlord will not have to repair damage caused
by you or your guests. However, you are not responsible
for ordinary wear and tear or damage caused by nature
or people you do not permit to come into your home.
(4)
To comply with any and all obligations imposed upon
tenants by current applicable building and housing
codes.
(5)
To replace the batteries as needed in a batteryoperated
smoke detector and to notify the landlord if the smoke
detector needs to be repaired or replaced. To not
render the smoke detector inoperable and to not knowingly
permit anyone else to do so.
(6)
Vacate the premises at the end of the term, leaving
them in good, clean condition. If you holdover at
the end of the term and the landlord continues to
accept rental payments from you, unless your rental
agreement otherwise provides, the law may deem you
to have entered a new term of lease according to the
same terms as your rental agreement. For example,
if you have a lease agreement for a one-year term
and holdover at the end of the term you may be bound
to an additional oneyear term.
To
protect yourself you should make a thorough inspection
of premises you intend to rent and set out in writing
any damages or defects in the premises existing when
you take occupancy, so that you will not be held responsible
for them at the end of the term.
If
something goes wrong with your home which is the landlord?s
duty to fix, you should let him know in writing what
needs to be repaired and you must give him a reasonable
amount of time to get the repairs done. What amount
of time is reasonable depends on the nature of the
problem. Leaks, a broken furnace in winter, and bad
wiring, etc., should be corrected promptly. It may
be reasonable, however, for a landlord to take a few
weeks to repair other problems.
If
the problem is a real emergency, your notice to the
landlord does not have to be written, but it is always
wise to give a dated written notice and keep a copy
for yourself. REMEMBER: The landlord's obligation
to perform his duties is dependent on your performance
of your duties as a tenant.
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Your
Rights As A Landlord
If
you are a landlord, you can rent your property for
whatever amount you choose, although you may not raise
rent during the term of a lease and you must give
proper notice to your tenant of any change if there
is a periodic tenancy (week-to-week or month-to-month).You
may rent to whomever you wish and you may set any
terms in your rental agreement you wish, provided
that they are not contrary to local, state or federal
laws. You do not have the right to relieve yourself
of duties imposed on landlords by the law. While generally
you may refuse to rent to anyone, you may not discriminate
against a tenant or prospective tenant because of
his race, color, religion, ancestry, sex, country
of birth, handicap, or familial status. The prohibition
against discrimination based on familial status makes
it illegal, in most circumstances, to refuse to allow
children to live in a residential unit.
You
may evict a tenant, who violates any provision of
your rental agreement, which you and the tenant have
agreed is a ground for eviction. Failure to pay rent
is always a ground for eviction. You may reserve the
right to enter, inspect, and make repairs on or show
the rental property at reasonable times and in a reasonable
manner.
You
have the right to have your property returned to you
in the same condition as it was when the tenant took
possession, with the exception of ordinary wear and
tear and damage done by natural forces or people other
than the tenant or his guests.
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Your
Duties As A Landlord
As
a landlord you have a duty:
(1) To comply with current applicable building and
housing codes;
(2) Make all repairs and do whatever is necessary
to put and keep the rental premises in a fit and habitable
condition;
(3) Keep all common areas in safe condition;
(4) Maintain in good, safe working order, and promptly
repair all electrical, plumbing, sanitary, heating,
ventilating, air conditioning, and other facilities
and appliances which you have supplied or are required
by your agreement or any law to supply after you have
been notified by the tenant of any defects in writing
(in emergencies such notice does not have to be in
writing);
(5) To provide and install battery-operated or electrical
smoke detectors and to place new batteries in a battery-
operated smoke detector at the beginning of the lease.
You
must perform any other duties required by your rental
agreement. You may also be required to allow a tenant
with a disability to modify the premises and accommodate
that tenant's needs. Except
in emergencies, you must notify your tenants in writing
of any breaches by the tenant of duties imposed on
him by law.
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Security
Deposits
A
landlord is permitted by law to charge his tenants,
as a security deposit, up to two weeks' rent if the
tenancy is week-to-week, up to one and a half month's
rent if the tenancy is month-to-month, and up to two
months' rent for tenancies of longer periods.
If
the tenant wishes to keep pets on the premises, the
landlord may charge a reasonable, nonrefundable fee
as a pet deposit in addition to the security deposit.
If a tenant breaks a lease, the landlord may use the
security deposit to protect himself from loss if (1)
a tenant fails to pay rent, (2) damages the rental
property, or (3) leaves before the end of the rental
term or without proper notice, (4) if the landlord
has court costs evicting the tenant or other costs
of re-renting the rental property or (5) if a lien
is created on the rental property because of the tenant's
use.
A
landlord who receives a security deposit from a residential
tenant must either deposit the money in a bank or
savings and loan trust account or obtain a bond from
a licensed insurance company to secure repayment of
the security deposit to any tenant who is entitled
to its return. The landlord must tell the tenant within
30 days after the beginning of the lease the name
and address of the savings institution holding the
account or the insurance company providing the bond.
Within
30 days after the end of any lease the landlord must
either refund the security deposit to the tenant or
deliver an itemized statement of any damage or injury
together with any balance of the security deposit.
If the landlord does not know the tenant's address
he must hold the balance of any security deposit for
at least six months. Landlords are not required by
law to pay interest on security deposits to the tenant.
Landlords may not withhold any part of the security
deposit for conditions due to normal wear and tear.
The landlord may keep the deposit only to the extent
necessary to cover his losses.
If
a landlord sells the rental property, he must, within
30 days thereafter, either return the deposit balance
in the manner set out above or transfer it to the
new owner and notify the tenant of this fact.
Tenants
may sue landlords for accountings, the return of security
deposits or for actual damages if the landlord fails
to comply with his duties concerning such deposits.
If a landlord is found by a court to have willfully
failed to comply with the law concerning security
deposits, the court has authority to require the landlord
to pay the tenant a reasonable attorney's fee.
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Late
Fees
A
landlord may impose, if the rental agreement allows,
a late charge on any rental payment which is late
by five days or more. The late charge can either be
five (5%) percent of the rental payment or fifteen
($15.00), whichever is greater. Alate fee may be imposed
only one time for each late rental payment and may
not be deducted from a subsequent rental payment so
as to cause the subsequent rental payment to be in
default.
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Who
Owns What
Tenants
should be aware that unless they have an agreement
with their landlord saying otherwise, any improvement
the tenant makes to the rental property may become
a part of the real estate, thus belonging to the landlord
at the end of the rental term. Tenants should be aware
of this before they install or affix anything to the
real estate such as carpeting, bathroom fixtures,
light fixtures, shutters, shrubs, etc. Tenants should
also know that their personal property is not covered
by the landlord?s insurance policy; the tenant can
buy insurance for his or her personal property.
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Eviction
In
North Carolina a landlord may evict tenants by a special
court procedure called summary ejectment if the lease
is breached or terminated. A landlord in North Carolina
may not use self help such as cutting off utilities
or locking tenants out of their homes in lieu of summary
ejectment. The Clerk of Superior Court in your county
has the forms and information you need to bring a
summary ejectment action in magistrate's court.
In
addition, accelerated evictions may occur for tenants
and all members of the tenant's household if criminal
activity (such as drug trafficking) has occurred.
If
a court enters a judgment for possession in favor
of the Landlord, the Landlord is entitled to possession
of the premises after the appeal period has expired
and a Writ of Possession has been executed and delivered
by the Sheriff upon the tenants.
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