Park Slope Bedbug Disaster
I’m hoping someone can offer some advice about this difficult situation – I’ve spoken to some lawyers but I wanted the Brownstoner take. About the middle of September, I signed a lease on a dream apartment – recent gut renovation, really close to the park, beautiful block. The property manager allowed us early access, since…
I’m hoping someone can offer some advice about this difficult situation – I’ve spoken to some lawyers but I wanted the Brownstoner take.
About the middle of September, I signed a lease on a dream apartment – recent gut renovation, really close to the park, beautiful block. The property manager allowed us early access, since the place had been empty for some time. Apparently the entire building had vacated; we and the ground floor duplex were both 9/1 leases.
So last Friday, we loaded up the U Haul and spent all day carrying things up the stairs. It literally wasn’t until the last item was walked through the door that I looked down at a speck on the wall and realized I was staring at a bedbug.
I caught it and stuck it in a bottle, and immediately got online to verify. It was the real deal. I just happened to google the address of the place, too, when I found a posting about an infestation there on bedbugregistry.com. I thought I recognized the poster’s username from some of the old mail in our mailbox, so I googled that person as well – turns out they lived nearby.
Forgoing inhibition, I walked directly over to the previous tenant and knocked on the door. ‘Lo and behold, they knew exactly why I was coming. Turns out, there had been a serious problem with bedbugs in the building, and all the tenants had moved out before their leases were up. The landlord was not only notified, but was well aware of the problem and had not effectively addressed it, requiring previous tenants to hire their own pest control people.
The next day, I phoned the property manager to ask if he knew anything about a prior infestation, which he denied. When I mentioned that I’d spoken to previous tenants and could substantiate with email chains, photos, and an actual specimen, he relented and said that if I wanted to get out of the lease and get my money back, that would be alright since it wasn’t even the 1st yet.
At great expense, I hired a moving company to come get all our stuff and take it to a storage facility while we found a new apartment. The apartment was completely vacant by last night, the 30th. Both the property manager and broker were informed that the apartment was open to be shown to prospective tenants.
I called the property manager this morning to schedule a time to come pick up the rent and deposit (they have first, last, and security). He told me to stop by the office tomorrow afternoon.
Not less than an hour later, I got a call from the landlord himself, informing me that I didn’t know what I was talking about, that the building had no bedbug problem now or ever, and that he considered the lease to still be in effect and binding. I told him that not informing us ahead of time that there had been an infestation was something I considered fraudulent, and that he had plenty of time to rent the apartment, that all we wanted was our money back and no bad blood was necessary – I was willing to eat the cost of the movers. He responded that he wouldn’t allow it. I told him that I guessed, then, we’d have to talk to an attorney. He dared me to do so.
He also suggested that my own home (I own an investment property) might just as easily turn up on a site like bedbugregistry.com – although I’d never mentioned the site. I asked him what exactly he meant by that and he quickly changed the topic. But I’m pretty sure we both understood what he was after.
So that’s my nightmare, which is as of yet ongoing. Does anyone here have any thoughts or advice? I’m contacting everyone I know to try to figure out what our next step will be.
ANY advice will be appreciated!
You will easily be able to recover any monies given to the landlord up to this point and be entitled to break the lease for material breach by the landlord of habitability.
Get testimony from the formet tenants as well.
You can get your moving costs too – detrimental reliance on the contract (the lease) being upheld. You relied on that and incurred moving costs. You could arguably get you storage costs and costs of ensuring your furniture is not infested covered as well. It does not sound like you want to push it this far, but all of that is a possibility if the landlord had knowledge of the infestation (which according to your story he did – even though he initially lied about it and then made veiled threats regarding your investment property).
I’m a landlord and this guy sounds like a real scumbag.
This is no slam dunk for twinreverb here….
sure if the old tenants REALLY all moved because of a bedbug infestation, and are credibly willing to testify – then the LL is out of luck. BUT
I wonder….I mean if a LL loses all his tenants, is he really going to NOT treat the building before re-leasing
What was the reason given to TR for an entire rental building being empty???
Also I dont doubt that you have a BB in a jar but if I’m not mistaken BB dont crawl on walls in broad daylight – they are light adverse and I believe are only active at night.
Former tenants may hate the LL for many reasons (such as rent increases that forced them to move)…are the former tenants REALLY willing to testify/sign affiidavits to BB infestation? – I assume they called 311 or HPD to file complainnt and the building had BB related violations….right?
How “former” was this former tenant – usually takes quite awhile before a new address would show up on Google?
What evidence is there (assuming that former tenants are not 100% credible) that you didnt being BB with you (either from former apartment or moving truck)
Basically – the law is on LL side. Unless you can PROVE that apartment was inhabitable at the time of lease signing (did you inspect), and the LL knew or should have known – the tenant is responsible for the lease, and will be liable for the rent until the tenant finds a suitable replacement.
That being said, justice is very human centric especially at this level – so depending on the judge, the litigants (how big an A-hole anyone comes off as) etc…ma very well decide the case.
But if I was TR here, I wouldnt approach this with a chip on the shoulder or any arrogance – it is not slam dunk and btw – forget about moving expense, unless you can really prove willful hiding by LL
I’m a landlord and I’ve had tenants get bedbugs on about three difference occasions. I hate it when it happens because if a person on the third floor all of a sudden gets beg bugs and no one else has them, it’s because they bought some used furniture or stayed overnight in a hotel with them and that’s not my fault. Anyhow, everytime the problem was solved after a visit by the exterminator. I don’t think they travel between floors. They attach themselves to your body from furniture or a mattress but I think they’re fairly easily dealt with. At least in my experience.
Ironballs is right. This aint TV. Judge will side with OP in heartbeat. Ask prior tenant for a short letter, signed and with his/her contact info. With their emails as backup.
I’m a landlord, but wtf. This is sleazy.
Under what conditions did the prior tenants move? Did they still have time on their leases? Was there any exchange between them & the LL or mgr. about bedbugs? Did anyone undertake any extermination?
Find out the above info & also whether anyone kept any form of correspondence about it all.
I’d immediately get on to Gersh Kuntzman, Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn, etc. They’ll phone the LL so he knows you’re not making empty threats & that might move him to agree to your requests. I also think you’re entitled to reimbursement of your moving fees & any other expenses you may have incurred. Your lease guarantees livable conditions & you don’t have them.
modsquad, you are an ass.
If you hire a lawyer, offer to bring in the former tenants. I bet they are out money and would like to get it back. Having them as a party would destroy any credibility from the landlord.
Modsquad,
I guarantee the OP can win back his rent and security deposit in court.
Whether he can get moving expenses, I’m not sure.
He has the bedbug as proof plus testimony of previous tenants.
He doesn’t need anything else. He will prevail in court, no question about it.
I’m not without sympathy for the OP. I’ve spent many days in Part 52 in Manhattan. I would sooner live with bedbugs than deal with that place. I just don’t think this is a slam dunk. Unless there is a current condition that shows a lack habitability I think he is stuck. The burden of proof is on his shoulders, not the LL to prove anything.