Perhaps I should’ve inserted the odd ‘surely’ or ‘maybe’ to make it clear that I was stating a point of view. I would’ve provided links to relevant legislation if I had been making a legal point. I apologise if my post was unclear in that respect.lukey wrote:I'm sorry, but I don't see howis stating a point of view - it sounds quite matter of fact, albeit wrong, to me.Stuart* wrote:The tenant is equally culpable
I was simply pointing out that a tenant should not be able to make a claim against a landlord when they have willingly accepted a situation which fails to meet all the regulations.
I am not trying to support rogue landlords. The law should take action against those who ignore their responsibilities with severe penalties. However, I could not advocate a claim by any tenant against a landlord which relies on regulations they have been so willing to ignore for their own benefit.
I have always made sure I have never been in such a situation, but surely a lawyer would be able to construct a reasonable defence against any claim based on the fact that the tenant willingly accepted that their accommodation was in breach of regulations.
It’s easier, of course, just to abide by the regulations and charge the appropriate rent. The landlord is then protected by their own insurance in the event of any claim.
Landlords are not philanthropists. They provide a service and receive the appropriate reward. I have not tried to claim that it’s an ‘equal’ relationship and I’m not aware of anyone who has.Gavin Scott wrote:In 99% of buy-to-let or HMO properties, the landlord turns a profit on the arrangement - over and above the investment in the property itself; otherwise there wouldn't be so many of them.
As much as you would like to think its an "equal" relationship it simply isn't.
Considerable legislation is in place to protect both parties, but if they willingly conspire to ignore it in part then they should not be able to claim protection from the same regulations at a later date. We can’t pick and choose which parts of the law we want to abide by simply because it suits us at the time.
No back-tracking at all.Isonstine wrote:I sense a little bit of back tracking here....
And with all respect, in my humble opinion and this is just my view here but ANYONE who uses carp like "caveat emptor" just comes across as a pretentious dick. What not just use the much easier and clearer "buyer beware" rather than trying to bolster the argument with fancy terms. It's what it means anyway!
'Caveat emptor' is a colloquially acceptable term which most people understand without the need of a Latin-English dictionary. If that's too 'high-brow' for you then I suggest you stick to using your crayons, Jimmy!