Disneyliscious
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2009
- Messages
- 2,281
Had I gotten, for instance, half of my deposit back, I'd likely have been a bit annoyed, but would have left it at that.
What has me a bit fired up goes beyond that, though; it feels as though my deposit was systematically kept unfairly.
Why would you be annoyed? You have already admitted to damages that could easily equal half or more of your deposit.
I don't know the laws in your state, but here in TN the place must be left EXACTLY as it was when you moved in (I have experience in rental of over 20 years now, writing contracts, and court cases due to family rentals).
Did you hang any photos? When you left, did you fill the nail holes in with putty, sand it down, then re-paint the walls? The next tenants moving in would not want to see nail holes in the walls where your photos hung.
Were all light bulbs working that were working when you moved in? Yep. Many people leave rooms with no bulbs in them and there is a cost in replacing them.
Were any mini blinds dirty or broken?
Did you physically pull the stove and refrigerator out and sweep/mop underneath them? There is a terrible amount of dust and dirt that gets trapped under those and it leaves your germs for the next people moving in.
Did you clean and dis-infect the inside of the stove and refrigerator? This is one of the biggest problems I see. People take their food out of a refrigerator and think its clean lol.
Did you wipe out all cabinets, even those you can't see the bottom of because they are too high?
Did you leave any trash behind?
Were there any spots on the wall? Dirt? Smoke? Crayons? Etc?
We're all doors in good shape and hanging properly? were ceiling fans cleaned? Light switches cleaned? Door handles have any dirt around them from use?
The list goes on and on.
You have already admitted damage to a 9x10 area of carpet. The landlord has the option to "depreciate" the carpet and charge you a percentage of replacement value (thus when several tenants pay replacement value the cost to replace has been taken care of) or he can charge you the full cost of replacing the carpet if it needs to be replaced. You have failed to say what kind of damages they were. Even a small hole or stain can warrant the need for full replacement if its in the right area (the landlord is obligated to replace it if there is a hole in the walking area, or risk being sued if the hole catches someones foot and trips them causing an injury).
Your 9x10 room will need 10.5 square yards of carpet to replace (10 square yards and 5% waste which allows for meeting the walls on rooms not 100% perfectly level in line, this is customary). On an *average* of $20 per square yard (carpet, padding, tacking strips, clean up, install) you are looking at $210 minimum. Possibly more since most rentals use high traffic carpet which costs more.
Carpet cleaning. There were other rooms in the apartment which had carpet and needed cleaning. A safe guess is $150 for a company to come out and clean and Scotch Guard the remaining carpets.
Now, you said it was clean and they said they needed to clean it. A rental clean could easily run $150.
We are now up to $510 of a $769 deposit. Thats a $259 difference and given the difference in cost of living in TN compared to NJ, I wouldn't find it hard to believe that your entire deposit was used for those 3 things alone (not counting if any of the other things I mentioned had to be taken care of).
I'm not taking sides, just giving you a view point from the Landlord side. While there are many crooked landlords, there are just as many crooked renters (not saying you are, Im just pointing out there ARE bad people on each side).
I think you should definitely write and ask for a detailed list of costs and go from there. Being that you have already admitted carpet damage, its going to be hard to get the case in your favor because honestly, $780 is chump change on repairing a unit after someone leaves. Many times it costs us thousands.
In this country you have every right to take your side to court, and if your case is strong, you may win. However, I can guarantee you that you won't get all of your deposit back and likely wouldn't get any based on what you have said here. If you don't have photos to prove your case, its "he said/she said" and with already admitted damages, the judge will likely rule in the favor of the landlord.
In 23 years of renting and probably 100-150 court cases (many just on non-payment of rent alone which doesn't apply here), I can tell you that we have never, ever lost one court case - because we had photos and the tenants didn't.
Honestly, I would chalk this up as a lesson learned and move on, but I would still get my itemized list just to settle my curiosity.