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Montana's premier marketplace for rental property, business, services and classified ad listings. At www.MT4Rent.com and www.MontanaBulletinBoard.com our sister website, we take pride in bringing tenants, property managers, buyers and sellers together, providing services that assist tenants, landlords, buyers and sellers in cities throughout the wonderful state of Montana. Find or place classified ads, place apartment / loft, house / home, condo / condominium, mobile home / manufactured home, cabin, business, office space rental listings for your area. MT4Rent works with buyers, sellers, businesses, and service oriented people, tenants and property managers / landlords alike, we list all types of classified advertisements and provide an extremely useful, resourceful Business/Service Directory for buyers, sellers, and folks looking for quality companies that survive on a shoestring advertisement budget, including residential, vacation and commercial rental properties for property managers and tenants looking for rental property. Check out the helpful Services/Business Directory offering many services to tenants, landlords, service providers and service end users alike, to assist in everyday MT living and property management.


Your Rights as a Tenant

If your application to rent an apartment is rejected, you have a right to know why. It is illegal for a landlord to refuse your rental application for discriminatory reasons. Federal law prohibits discrimination on the basis of:

  1. Race
  2. Color
  3. Religion
  4. National origin
  5. Sex
  6. Age
  7. Familial status (including not allowing children, discrimination against pregnant women)
  8. Physical disability
  9. Mental disability (including alcoholism and past drug addiction)

States and many cities have similar housing laws, and yours may prohibit other kinds of discrimination, including:

  • Marital status
  • Sexual orientation

Federal housing law prohibits a variety of discriminatory conduct:

  1. Advertising cannot contain any statement indicating a preference or limitation based on any of the protected classes listed above.

  2. The landlord may not make any similar implication or statement.

  3. A landlord cannot say that an apartment is not available when in fact it is available.

  4. A landlord cannot use a different set of rules for assessing applicants belonging to a protected class.

  5. A landlord cannot refuse to rent to persons in a protected class.

  6. A landlord cannot provide different services or facilities to tenants in a protected class or require a larger deposit, or treat late rental payments differently.

  7. A landlord cannot end a tenancy for a discriminatory reason.

  8. A landlord cannot harass you.

Note: The federal housing statutes do not apply to all rental property. The main exceptions are owner-occupied buildings with four or fewer rental units (e.g., a duplex), housing offered by religious groups or private organizations for their members, housing designated for senior citizens, and single-family housing being rented without discriminatory advertising or a real estate broker.

A landlord cannot refuse to rent to you because of a "no pets" policy if you have a trained helper animal, such as a seeing-eye dog, or a dog that helps you negotiate with a physical or mental disability. If the landlord does refuse, he or she has violated federal law, including the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Example: A jury in Minneapolis, Minnesota, recently awarded large damages to a man who was grief-stricken after his son's murder and had begun taking care of his son's dog at the suggestion of his therapist. Before he started taking care of the dog he was severely depressed and not functioning normally. The jury concluded that enforcing the landlord's no-pets policy under those circumstances was a form of disability discrimination.

If you were rejected because the landlord received negative information about you, including information from previous landlords, your employer, your bank or other third parties, you have a right to know why.

Under the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act a landlord has to tell you if the rejection was based on negative credit information that came from a source other than your credit report.

  • The federal Fair Credit Reporting Act also requires a landlord to tell you that, during the sixty days after he or she informs you that there was negative credit information, you may submit a written request for disclosure of the negative information.
  • After receiving your request for disclosure of the negative information, the landlord must tell you "the nature of the information," within a "reasonable time." The law does not indicate how much detail the landlord must give you.

You have a right to "habitable" premises. This is a fancy way of saying the apartment or house you are renting is fit to be lived in. Don't compromise on this right. You have a right not to live in a hovel. Most states do not let a landlord put language in the lease stating that you "waive" the right (that is, give it up). The following conditions could make premises "uninhabitable."

  • Unsafe conditions, such as holes in the floor, plaster coming down from the ceiling, bad wiring, and the like.
  • Gross infestation of vermin such as cockroaches or mice.

Under federal law, rental housing must be free of lead-based paint. It is more typical in older buildings, and up to 75 percent of the housing stock is still affected by it. No matter how old or new the premises are, watch for chipping paint, peeling paint, flaking paint, and paint dust.

Warning: Lead-based paint is extremely dangerous to small children and pets, causing damage to the central nervous system. Crawling and toddling children interact with their environments by putting things in their mouths, and paint dust is easily inhaled. The consequences for your children could include diminished IQs, learning disabilities, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADD/ADHD), mental retardation, and brain damage.

Your Rights as a Tenant


You have a right to privacy. Your landlord cannot come into your apartment or house without prior permission unless there is a true emergency like a fire or a flood in the bathroom.

The landlord must give you advance notice before coming into your apartment for other reasons, like making repairs or showing the unit to a potential tenant. Some states have laws that regulate these entries and set forth rules on how much advance notice the landlord must give, and whether the landlord must tell you what time he or she will enter and why.

Your landlord cannot require a deposit that exceeds a limit set by your state's law. Not all states have an upper limit, however. Also, the statute may allow different limits depending on your age (a lower limit for senior citizens, for example), whether you have a pet or waterbed, the length of your lease, or other factors.

A landlord must treat tenants equally on deposit requirements. If you are required to provide a larger deposit than one of your neighbors, you have the right to know why.

In many states the landlord must return the deposit to you at the end of the lease term with interest set by a statute.

Many states also have a statute stating how much time a landlord may take to return your deposit after you move out (usually thirty days).

If the entire deposit is not returned, your landlord must send you an itemized list of how the money was spent. Common conditions that lead to reduced deposit refunds include:

  • Repairs to damages on the premises beyond mere wear and tear

  • Cleaning to restore the premises to the condition they were in at the beginning of your lease (beyond normal wear and tear)

  • Unpaid rent

Tip: Take pictures of the apartment when you first move in, especially areas that may be damaged already, and take the same picture when you move out. Save the receipts for developing the film so you know which is which and can establish the date on which you took the pictures. Or make videotape.

You have several legal rights if your landlord takes action against you for nonpayment of rent or a breach of the lease. Generally, your rights relate to having proper notice of the proceedings against you, a chance to make good on the unpaid rent or to repair your breach of the lease, and rights to appeal. If you are worried that you may be evicted, you may want to discuss the situation with a lawyer or a local tenants' association.

You also have a right to take legal action against your landlord for breach of contract if he or she breaches the lease, fails to return your deposit, takes unwarranted deductions from your deposit, or fails to make repairs. Before proceeding, you will want to discuss your options with a lawyer.

Tenant Rights and Responsibilities


Finding an apartment

Finder's Fee

Only a licensed real estate broker or salesperson can charge you a fee for the purpose of finding an apartment. The amount, due date, and the purpose of the fee must be disclosed to you prior to any transaction. There in no set amount to the fee, as it is a contractual arrangement between the licensed broker or salesperson and you (M.G.L c. 112, 87DDD-1/2).

Pre-payments

Before you move in, the landlord can only collect the first and last months rent, one months security deposit, and the purchase and installation costs for a lock and key (M.G.L. c. 186, 15B).

Rights Against Unlawful Discrimination

Massachusetts law prohibits discrimination in housing on the basis of race, religion, national origin, age, ancestry, military background or service, sex, sexual preference, marital status, blindness, deafness, or the need of a guide dog, except owner-occupied two family dwellings (M.G.L. c. 151B, 4). No landlord can refuse to rent you an apartment because you receive a rental subsidy, because the apartment contains lead, or, with some exceptions, because you have children.

Before Agreeing to a Tenancy (or Signing a Lease)

  • Do not put money down unless you are sure you want the apartment. Although you may be legally entitled to the return of your money up until the landlord formally accepts you as a tenant, that money may be difficult to recover.

  • Calculate the anticipated costs of utilities (i.e., heat, electricity) when determining which apartments you can afford.

  • Know what is expected of you in terms of pre-payments or a finders fee.
    Finding an apartment.

  • Check the apartment to ensure that it is in acceptable condi-tion. Put all agreements for repairs in writing.

  • Evaluate the proposed tenancy agreement and the response record of a non-resident superintendent to after hours emergencies.

  • Talk with perspective neighbors about the competency and reputation of the landlord and/or management company.

Rental Agreements

According to state consumer protection regulations, a landlord must include the following in a written rental agreement:

  • The names, addresses, and telephone numbers of the owners and other persons who are responsible for the care, main-tenance, and repair of the property;
  • The name, address, and telephone number of the person authorized to receive notices of violations of law and to accept notice of a lawsuit on behalf of the owner;
  • The amount of the security deposit and disclosure of the rights under the Security Deposit Law.

If the landlord uses a lease that contains any provision that conflicts with the Security Deposit Law and attempts to enforce that provision or attempts to obtain from you or a prospective tenant a waiver of any provision of the Security Deposit Law, the landlord cannot keep your security deposit for any reason including making deductions for damages.

You may want to meet the landlord of a small owner occupied building before you sign the agreement. This tends to foster a good and congenial relationship from the start.

The landlord also must give you an executed copy of the rental agreement within 30 days of your signing it (940 CMR 3.17 (3)). You and the landlord may agree verbally to the terms of your tenancy. It is safer, however, to get all terms in writing.

Types of tenancy

Your legal rights may vary depending on what type of tenancy you have.

A Tenant with a Lease is one who signs a lease to rent a particular apartment for a specified period of time. Under this tenancy, the landlord cannot increase your rent until the end of the lease, and cannot attempt to evict you before the end of your lease, unless you violate the lease agreement. You are legally obligated to pay your rent until the end of the lease. However, if you need or choose to move out before the end of the lease, in most circumstances the landlord has a duty to mitigate his/her loss by looking for another tenant to replace you.

A Tenant at Will is one who occupies a rented apartment without a lease, but pays rent periodically (typically monthly). The agreement for the Tenancy at Will may be either written or verbal. Either the landlord or you may terminate this arrangement at any time by giving written notice of 30 days or one full rental period in advance, whichever is longer. No reason is required to terminate a Tenancy at Will. If your landlord wants to raise your rent, s/he must send you a proper legal notice terminating your tenancy, and then make you an offer to remain in the apartment for the increased rent.

If your tenancy is subsidized, you may have different rights and responsibilities than those summarized in this information.

Paying the rent

As a tenant, you have a legal responsibility to pay your landlord for the use of a place that is in decent condition. Massachusetts law also provides you with rights that protect the payments you make to the landlord (M.G.L. c. 186, 15B).

Pre-payments

It is an unfair or deceptive practice for a landlord to demand that you pre-pay rent in excess of that allowed by law. (See section on Finding an Apartment.)

Late Payment Penalty

A landlord cannot charge interest or a penalty on late rent until 30 days after the due date. However, the landlord can begin the eviction process immediately, even if the rent is only one day overdue. The landlord also cannot use a reverse penalty clause to encourage you to pay early. For example, it is illegal for a landlord to reduce the rent by 10% if the rent is paid within the first five days of the month.

Rent Increases

A rental increase may be any amount the landlord wishes to charge. Rent for a Tenant with a Lease can be increased only when the lease term expires. Tenants at Will may face a rent increase at any time, as long as notice is received at least one full rental period, but not less than 30 days, before it becomes effective.

Security deposits & last months rent

Last months rent is the pre-payment to the landlord for the last month of tenancy. A security deposit is a deposit of money to the landlord to ensure that rent will be paid and other responsibilities of the agreement will be performed. Neither may be greater that the amount of the first months rent. If the landlord later raises the rent, s/he can require you to increase the amount of lasts months rent to equal the new rent. Neither the landlord nor you can transfer one for the use of the other without the other partys consent.

Receipts: Upon receiving the last months rent and/or a security deposit, the landlord must give you a receipt for each pre-payment. If the landlord collects the last months rent, s/he must give you a statement indicating that you are entitled to interest on this rent and that you should provide the landlord with a forwarding address at the termination of tenancy where interest can be sent.

Interest: The landlord must pay interest on both the security deposit and the last months rent. The payment of interest on the security deposit and last months rent has been required by law since January 1, 1972, and April 1, 1984, respectively.

Security Deposit: You are entitled to either 5% interest or whatever lesser amount is received from the bank where the deposit has been held, if you live in the apartment for at least one year. The law requires the landlord to hold a security deposit in a separate, interest-bearing account in a Massachusetts bank. Within 30 days of receiving your deposit, the landlord must give you a receipt identifying the banks name and address, the account number, and the amount of the deposit.

Last Months Rent: You are entitled to either 5% interest or whatever lesser amount is received from the bank where your rent was held. If the last months rent is not held in a bank account, the landlord must pay 5% interest per year. You do not have to live in your apartment for one year to be eligible for the interest.

Payment of Interest: Interest is payable to you each year on the anniversary date of your tenancy. The landlord must send you a statement of the interest owed, and must either include the interest or allow you to deduct the amount from the next rental payment. If you do not receive the interest within 30 days of the anniversary, then you may deduct the interest from the next months rent. Once you terminate your tenancy, any interest owed to you must be paid within 30 days of termination.

Statement of Condition: If a landlord or agent takes a security deposit, s/he must give you a signed, separate statement of the present condition of your apartment including a comprehensive list of any existing damage. The landlord/agent must provide you with this statement upon receipt of the deposit or within 10 days after the tenancy begins, whichever is later. If you do not agree with the contents of the statement, you must return a corrected copy to the landlord within 15 days after you receive the list or 15 days after you move in, whichever is later. If you fail to return the list and later sue to recover your security deposit, a court may view your failure to do so as your agreement that the list is complete and correct. If you submit a separate list of damages, the landlord must return it within 15 days of receipt with a clear written response of agreement or disagreement.

The signed statement and the original condition statement are the basis upon which future deductions for damage will be made. If the landlord does not send you a Statement of Condition, you should write your own and send a copy to the landlord or agent and keep a copy for your records.

Damage Deduction for Security Deposits: The landlord must return your security deposit or balance within 30 days after the termination of tenancy. The landlord can only deduct for the following:

  • Any unpaid rent which has not been withheld validly or deducted in accordance with the law;
  • Any unpaid increase in real estate taxes if you were obligated to pay it under a valid tax escalator clause in your lease;
  • A reasonable amount necessary to repair any damage caused by you, any person under your control, or any person on the premises with your consent. Pet damage can also be deducted. You do not have to pay for reasonable wear and tear associated with normal use.

If the premises are damaged, the landlord must provide you with a detailed list of damages and their necessary repairs within 30 days after the tenancy ends. The landlord or agent must swear to this list under the pains and penalties of perjury. In addition, the landlord or agent must provide you with written evidence indicating the actual or estimated cost of these repairs, such as estimates, bills, invoices, or receipts.

Transfers of Pre-payments to New Landlords: Upon sale or transfer of the building, the landlord must credit the last months rent and security deposit with any accrued interest to the new landlord. The new landlord must give written notice of the transfer within 45 days of receiving your money. If the former landlord fails to transfer the pre-payments to the new landlord, s/he is still liable, but the new landlord shall also be obligated to you for the amount of the pre-payments. The new landlord can satisfy this obligation by granting you free rent for a time equivalent to the payments made.

You are entitled to the immediate return of your security deposit plus accrued interest if the landlord:

  • Fails to make the security deposit records available for inspection
    during office hours; or
  • Fails to deposit the security deposit into a separate, interest-bearing account in a Massachusetts bank; or
  • Fails to provide you, within 30 days of receipt of the security deposit, a receipt with the name and location of the bank and the amount and account number of the deposit.

The landlord cannot keep any portion of your security deposit for any reason, including making deductions for damages, or counterclaim for any damage to the premises in a court action by you to recover a security deposit if the landlord . . .

  • Uses a lease which contains provisions conflicting with the Security Deposit Law and attempts to enforce these provisions or attempts to get you to sign a waiver of rights; or
  • Fails to deposit the security deposit into a separate, interest-bearing account in a Massachusetts bank; or
  • Fails to transfer the security deposit or last months rent to the new landlord after the sale of the rental property; or
  • Makes deductions for damages and fails to furnish you with an itemized list of damages within 30 days after termination of tenancy.

You may be entitled to three times the amount of the security deposit or the remaining balance to which you are entitled after lawful deductions with interest, plus court costs and reasonable attorneys fees if the landlord . . .

  • Fails to deposit the security deposit into a separate, interest-bearing account in a Massachusetts bank; or
  • Fails to transfer the security deposit or last months rent to the new landlord after the sale of the rental property; or
  • Fails to return the security deposit (or balance after lawful deductions) with interest within 30 days after termination of tenancy.

If the landlord fails to pay you any interest to which you are lawfully entitled (including interest on the security deposit and interest on the last months rent) within 30 days after termination of the tenancy, you may be entitled to three times the interest, plus court costs, and reasonable attorneys fees.

Tenants rights

Rights Against Unlawful Entry

Your landlord, or an agent for your landlord, may only enter your apartment for the following reasons:

  • To inspect the premises;
  • To make repairs;
  • To show the apartment to a prospective tenant, purchaser, mortgagee or its agents;
  • In accordance with a court order;
  • If the premises appear to be abandoned; or
  • To inspect the premises within the last 30 days of tenancy in order to determine the amount of damage to be deducted from the security deposit.

The landlord should be reasonable and attempt to arrange a mutually convenient time to visit the apartment. If the landlord insists on entering your apartment in an unreasonable fashion, you may file for a temporary restraining order at your local district court (M.G.L. c. 186, 14 and 15B).

Rights Against Retaliation

Although the landlord of a Tenant at Will or under lease can terminate the tenancy or raise the rent without reason, s/he cannot do so in response to your exercising your legal rights. If the landlord tries to raise the rent, terminate or otherwise change your tenancy within six months of when you contact the Board of Health, join a tenants organization, or exercise other legal rights, the landlords action will be considered retaliation against you, unless the landlord can prove otherwise. The landlord will have the burden to prove that your tenancy was changed for reasons other than your having exercised your rights (M.G.L. c. 186, 18).

Habitability Rights

You are entitled to a safe and habitable living environment throughout your entire tenancy. The State Sanitary Code protects the health, safety and well-being of tenants and the general public (105 CMR 410). The local Boards of Health enforce the Code. (Note: In Boston, it is the Housing Inspection Department.) Copies of the Code may be purchased from the State House Bookstore, State House, Room 116, Boston, MA 02133, (617) 727-2834.

The following is a sampling of provisions outlined in the Code:

Water: The landlord must provide you with enough water, with adequate pressure, to meet your ordinary needs. Under certain limited circumstances, you can be charged for water costs so long as it is clearly noted in your written rental agreement and there is a separate meter for your unit. The landlord must also provide the facilities to heat the water at a temperature between 110 F and 130 F, however your written tenancy agreement or lease may require you to pay for and provide the fuel to heat the water.

Heat: The landlord must provide a heating system in good working order. The landlord must pay for the heat, unless your lease requires you to pay for it. From September 16 to June 14, every room must be heated to at least 68 F between 7:00 AM and 11 PM, and at least 64 F at all other hours. During the heating season, the maximum heat allowable in the apartment is 78 F.

Kitchens: The landlord must provide within the kitchen: a sink of sufficient size and capacity for washing dishes and kitchen utensils, a stove and oven in good repair (unless your written lease requires you to provide your own), and space and proper facilities for the installation of a refrigerator. The landlord does not have to provide a refrigerator. If a refrigerator is provided, however, the landlord must keep it in working order.

Cockroaches and Rodents: The landlord must maintain the unit free from rodents, cockroaches, and insect infestation, if there are two or more apartments in the building.

Structural Elements: Every landlord must maintain the foundation, floors, walls, doors, windows, ceilings, roof, staircases, porches, chimneys, and other structural elements of the dwelling so that it excludes wind, rain, and snow; is rodent-proof, weathertight, watertight, and free from chronic dampness; in good repair, and in every way fit for its intended use.

Snow Removal: Every exit used or intended for use by occupants of more than one dwelling unit or rooming unit shall be maintained free from obstruction.

Tenants remedies

Rent Withholding

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that when a landlord fails to maintain a dwelling in habitable condition, a tenant may properly withhold a portion of the rent from the date the landlord has notice of this breach of warrant of habit-ability. Rent withholding can be a useful tool to force repairs, but it is a serious step and should be dealt with carefully. You may want to get legal advice before withholding your rent since the landlord may try to evict you for non-payment of rent.

You may withhold a portion of your rent if:

  • You have appealed to your landlord in writing to make the necessary repairs or
  • Your local Board of Health has inspected your apartment and found health code violations and notified your landlord or
  • You are current in your rent up until the time your landlord learns of the problem, you are not the cause of the problem, and the unsanitary conditions do not require the apartment to be vacated to make repairs.

Deciding how much to withhold is based on each situation. You need only pay the fair rent for your unit given its defective condition. Once the landlord has repaired all defects, the tenant must pay all withheld rent (M.G.L. c. 239, 8A).

Repair and Deduct

You may make emergency repairs in an apartment or common living area and deduct up to four months future rent to pay for them, if three conditions are met:

  • The local Board of Health or other code enforcement agency has certified that the present conditions endanger your health or safety; and
  • The landlord receives written notice of the existing violations from the inspecting agency; and
  • The landlord is given five days from the date of notice to begin repairs or to contract for outside services and 14 days to substantially complete all necessary repairs. (The inspecting agency or court may shorten this time frame.)

Remember: If you contract to make repairs and then deduct the cost from the rent, you must retain a receipt. Further, if the costs are deemed to be unreasonable, you will only be able to deduct that portion which is reasonable.

If you qualify under the requirements of repair and deduct, you may treat your lease as void. You then have the right to move out if you choose not to make repairs. However, you must pay the fair rental value for the period you occupied the apartment, and you must vacate within a reasonable period of time (M.G.L. c. 111, 127L).

Shutoff Rights

The landlord cannot cause the removal or shutoff of the utilities except for a temporary period during repair or emergencies. In cases when a landlords account is about to be shut off for non-payment, the utility company must notify you 30 days before the scheduled termination. You also may be asked to pay part of the overdue bill to the utility, and deduct that payment from your rent. Contact the Department of Public Utilities at 1-800-392-6066 for more information (M.G.L. c. 164, 124A-I).

Eviction

A landlord cannot lock you out or throw you out of your apartment without a judges order. If you are being evicted, Massachusetts law provides you with some protections. You may wish to consult with an attorney.

Terminating and Reviving your Tenancy

Tenants with a Lease: Your landlord may attempt to evict you if you have not been paying your rent, or if you or people under your control have caused excessive damage to your apartment or you have violated the terms of your lease. Your landlord must first send you a Notice to Quit your tenancy. If the landlord is terminating your tenancy for non-payment of rent, s/he must send you a 14-Day Notice to Quit (M.G.L.c.186, 11 and 12). Your lease will specify the notice requirement for other terminations; it is typically seven days.

If you are being evicted for non-payment of rent, you may avoid the eviction if you pay all rent owed, plus interest, and the landlords cost of filing an eviction case on or before the date your Answer is due.

Tenants at Will: Your landlord must send you a 14-Day Notice to Quit if terminating your tenancy for non-payment of rent (M.G.L. c. 186, 12). If it is being terminated for any other reason, you must be given written notice 30 days, or one full rental period in advance, whichever is longer.

If you are being evicted for non-payment of rent, you may avoid the eviction by paying the rent due within 10 days of receiving this notice, as long as this is the first notice you have received within the last 12 months. If there is no statement of your right to revive the tenancy in the Notice, you have until the date your Answer is due.

Landlords of tenants with rent subsidies must follow the eviction procedures in their rent subsidy contract and lease agreement.

Summary Process and Complaint

After the notice period passed, the landlord must deliver to you a Summary Process and Complaint. This officially informs you that the landlord is taking legal action against you. It will state the date of the eviction hearing and the date on which the Answer must be filed.

Answer

The Answer is a written response from you stating why you should not be evicted. It also gives you the chance to make counterclaims against your landlord, which may include health Sanitary Code violations, retaliation, harassment, security deposit violations, or improper eviction procedure. The Answer must be received by the court and the landlord the Monday before your court date. Keep a copy for yourself.

Judgment and Appeal

If you lose the case, you may appeal the decision and request a new hearing. If you appeal, you must file a Notice to Appeal within 10 days after the date the judgment is entered. An appeal bond is usually required, but may be waived if you cannot afford it; and you have a non-frivolous defense.

Execution

The execution is the judges eviction order; the landlord cannot physically evict you without this paper. If a physical eviction is allowed, the court will give the landlord the execution 10 days after the judgment is entered. You must receive written notice of the date and time the physical eviction will take place at least 48 hours in advance. On the date set in the 48-hour notice, you must leave apartment.

The landlord may use the execution anytime within a three-month period. However, if you were evicted for non-payment of rent, and the landlord accepts payment of the entire amount won in the summary process action and your current rent, then the landlord cannot use the execution at any point and must return it to the court (M.G.L. c. 239, 3).

The Stay of Execution

If the eviction was not your fault or you cannot in good faith find a place to live, you may be able to convince a judge to grant you a Stay of Execution, allowing you to stay in your apartment for up to six months. Elderly or disabled tenants can request a stay of up to one year.

If you are being evicted for non-payment of rent, you do not have any legal basis to request a stay. However, if your damages (which may arise from counterclaims filed against the landlord) are less than the amount owed to the landlord (e.g. back rent), you have seven days to avoid eviction by paying the balance, with interest, and court costs (M.G.L. c. 239, 8A).

Eviction

When the date written on the execution order arrives, you must move out. If you do not, a sheriff or constable may remove your belongings and place them in storage, unless you give permission to have them put on the street. If your belongings are put in storage, the mover should make a descriptive list of all stored items. Your former landlord has the right to sue to recover these eviction costs. The storage company will have a lien on your belongings, which can be enforced by selling your goods. The storage company, however, cannot sell your belongings without waiting six months. You are not required to pay back rent to get your furniture out of storage. But, you still owe the amount the court finds due, until you pay it for 20 years hence (M.G.L. c. 239, 4).

Moving out

Before you move out, you should consider scheduling an appointment with the landlord for an inspection of your apartment. This may help prevent future disputes with your landlord about apartment damage. Review the Statement of Condition form if you gave the landlord a security deposit. On the day you leave, be sure to clean the apartment. You also may want to take and date pictures of the condition of the apartment at the moment you move out. These photographs may help resolve security deposit disputes. If you paid the landlord a security deposit or last months rent, leave the landlord your forwarding address so s/he can mail you any interest you are owed.

Documents

Keep good records of rent payments, complaints, contacts with your landlord, attempts at repair, correspondence, and other important events and documents relating to your tenancy. These will help you resolve disputes in court and out.






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