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Landlord didn't protect deposit and now there's a dispute brewing

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  • RAS
    RAS Posts: 35,589 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    If your deposit was protected, you'd have been sleeping.

    When you got your LL's request for deductions, you'd have claimed back the full deposit, and she'd have submitted her evidence to the Scheme. You'd have the right of response, and then the Scheme would decide the deductions based on long experience.

    Based on most of the queries here, LLs expectations are often way over the odds. Take the loose door; that should have been repaired before it was even rented to you.

    So go for full return of the deposit and although she's still entitled to demand payment for repairs, I doubt a Scheme would allow much.
    If you've have not made a mistake, you've made nothing
  • Baer1982
    Baer1982 Posts: 26 Forumite
    10 Posts Name Dropper
    You must have had a contact number for things like boiler failing etc?

    Did you find the property through an estate agent or a advert in the free-ads?
    Yes, we had a mobile number that we could call her on, though it was only over whatsapp messages that we really interacted. 

    We found it via a facebook group where someone (not the landlord IIRC) posted a message about the apartment being available. We contacted the landlord though the contact provided there, she showed us around the property herself. 
  • DE_612183
    DE_612183 Posts: 3,786 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    Baer1982 said:
    You must have had a contact number for things like boiler failing etc?

    Did you find the property through an estate agent or a advert in the free-ads?
    Yes, we had a mobile number that we could call her on, though it was only over whatsapp messages that we really interacted. 

    We found it via a facebook group where someone (not the landlord IIRC) posted a message about the apartment being available. We contacted the landlord though the contact provided there, she showed us around the property herself. 
    So as we assumed she has not thought that being a landlord she has to do anything other than collect money. 
  • Baer1982
    Baer1982 Posts: 26 Forumite
    10 Posts Name Dropper
    RAS said:
    If your deposit was protected, you'd have been sleeping.
    Agree @RAS - there's many a slip 'twixt being entitled to a full refund and actually seeing the money I guess. 

    Take the loose door; that should have been repaired before it was even rented to you.
    I feel so too, and this is what I'd have done in her place. But as this loose door isn't in the moving in inventory, she could claim that we were to blame for taking this all the way from perfect condition to hanging loose. Anyways, as you said before, I guess it doesn't matter what the inventory said for the landlord's liability to protect the deposit. 

    One thing that just occurred to me: 

    While I've checked all 3 deposit protection companies and couldn't find my deposit, is it possible she's legitimately protected it elsewhere and I just don't know? 

    I also saw the LL is obligated to send some mandatory/prescribed information about where and how the deposit is protected, so I guess she's at fault at least for not informing me, though I'd imagine the penalties for this would be smaller. 

  • RAS
    RAS Posts: 35,589 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    If you've have not made a mistake, you've made nothing
  • Baer1982
    Baer1982 Posts: 26 Forumite
    10 Posts Name Dropper
    RAS said:
    Thanks - checked all three and none of them have our deposit. I've taken the printouts of the checks for reference.
  • macman
    macman Posts: 53,129 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    edited 8 August 2022 at 2:26PM
    Baer1982 said:
    RAS said:
    If your deposit was protected, you'd have been sleeping.
    Agree @RAS - there's many a slip 'twixt being entitled to a full refund and actually seeing the money I guess. 

    Take the loose door; that should have been repaired before it was even rented to you.
    I feel so too, and this is what I'd have done in her place. But as this loose door isn't in the moving in inventory, she could claim that we were to blame for taking this all the way from perfect condition to hanging loose. Anyways, as you said before, I guess it doesn't matter what the inventory said for the landlord's liability to protect the deposit. 

    One thing that just occurred to me: 

    While I've checked all 3 deposit protection companies and couldn't find my deposit, is it possible she's legitimately protected it elsewhere and I just don't know? 

    I also saw the LL is obligated to send some mandatory/prescribed information about where and how the deposit is protected, so I guess she's at fault at least for not informing me, though I'd imagine the penalties for this would be smaller. 

    No she couldn't, because she has to prove that it's condition has deteriorated beyond reasonable wear and tear during the tenancy, which she can't. In the absence of a proper check in inventory, you cannot be held liable in any way. In fact. you could have trashed the place and not be proven liable.
    The lack of prescribed info means that your tenancy was not regularised, so she could never have evicted you. More incompetency.
    What sort of LL lives in Spain and does not have any maintenance or emergency repair contract in place?
    No free lunch, and no free laptop ;)
  • DE_612183
    DE_612183 Posts: 3,786 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    macman said:

    Your LL is an incompetent amateur who has made no attempt to be a professional LL: you don't owe her any favours.

    This is the main point - not only is what she is doing amateurish, it's also probably illegal and dangerous. 
  • Baer1982
    Baer1982 Posts: 26 Forumite
    10 Posts Name Dropper
    edited 8 August 2022 at 2:52PM
    What sort of LL lives in Spain and does not have any maintenance or emergency repair contract in place?

    @DE_612183 said above The amateurish sort, apparently,
    :smile:

     
    Can the LL put the deposit under protection now? I guess it would be clear from the paperwork around the deposit protection that this is being set right way beyond the deadline and would offer the LL no mitigation?

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