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  • How a sucky landlord almost resulted in beheading

    Apologies if this is in the wrong section. Still feeling my way around here.

    This is not my personal story, but rather my best friend. He relates once in a while and we laugh about it now, but this is a story of how someone almost got beheaded because of a landlord's ignorance. (or landlord's wife, more likely)


    "M" had been living for about 2 years in the bottom half of a house. Another friend of ours rented the upstairs. M is not a raging slob, even by "single guy" standards, and rarely had any issues with the landlord. I've met the landlord since then and he seems like a really cool guy. The only problem M had was that the landlord wasn't always easy to get a hold of. (having a full-time office job, he used the house as some additional income)

    So the landlord decides he's going to sell the building. This is not a big deal... except for the fact that he never told M people were going to start coming over and viewing the house, plus there was never a For Sale sign put on the front lawn... not at first, anyway.


    At this point I should describe the street M lived on. It's a block long, stretching from the main street in his town (a nice, mostly middle-class town) down to a street that runs parallel to the train tracks. One the other side of the street is a bar supply place, the parking lot for a bar, some business that did industrial electrical installation and a little house with a family of four. No problems there except sometimes idiotic drunken drivers leaving the bar at night... and on busy days like Superbowl Sunday or St. Pat's Day sometimes morons would park in front of (or IN!) M's driveway. That only happened a couple of times and it was remedied quickly.

    On M's side of the block was about 4 other houses. A couple were decent little places. The house to his left was split up into 2 apartments plus a basement apartment. Unfortunately, the guy in the basement was some sort of drunk/drug user and sometimes made a racket. But he never started any crap with M, so that was okay.

    The house to his right we called the Cathouse. The people who lived there were borderline hoarding personality, if you happen to know what that is. It's an area of interest of mine from my psychology days. They were definitely some sort of drug users, too. (the cops would typically visit there once every other week over noise, drug use, fights, or other idiocy) These folks would put out cat food for a bunch of local strays, which encouraged them to hang around all the time, breeding uncontrollably, and getting all sorts of disease because they were mostly feral and without veterinary care. I don't care if someone has a hundred cats, as long as they take proper care of them. So M had to call the health department and eventually they told the Cathouse people that they could only have 2 cats and any more would result in them being fined X dollars per day per cat. Well, they kept encouraging the loose cats (plus deputies found a dead kitten IN the house!) so they ended up getting a bunch of fines levied against the house. At some point one or more of them moved out.

    That was a little lengthy, but it's important to the story as a whole: M had druggie lunatics living on each side of him.


    M worked roughly 9 - 5 but did so at a hospital that was a solid 40 - 50 minute drive, so had to be up early and sometimes came pulling in fairly late. As such, he would sleep in weekends... until 9 - 10am or longer. Plus he was still in the "gamer" mindset and might stay up until 2am playing video games or download from the net.

    So one Saturday morning at 8:30am he awakens to a noise in his home. Groggy, M looked through the crack between his bedroom door and the door frame to see someone standing at the end of the little hallway looking in a closet. His bedroom door was one end of the hall, which was around 12 feet long, and the closet was at the opposite end. The bathroom was to the right and the doorway that went into the dining room/living room area was to the left. Not recognizing the person in his closet as the landlord or our friend upstairs, M grabbed a machete (we're both something of weapons collectors... having an avid interest in medieval weapons mostly, but M has a few knives and machetes and I collect katannas) M opened to door from his bedroom and was walking up to the guy looking in his closet and, had the REAL ESTATE AGENT not stepped through the doorway just then, was about to bring the machete down on the back of the PROSPECTIVE BUYER'S HEAD.

    The landlord and the landlord's wife (who we later discovered was a true ultra-bitch) NEVER bothered to call M to let him know someone would be looking at the house. He kept both his cell phone and cordless home phone (which was fully charged and working at the time - he checked) on the shelf right next to his head. Caller ID confirmed NO ONE ever called him, either the landlord or the real estate company, to let him know someone was coming over first thing in the morning.

    Now, I'm not trying to start any sort of debate on the legality of someone getting decapitated by a groggy homeowner... the point is: the landlord and real estate company never called to let M know that someone would be there and the would-be seller came close to death or severe injury because of it.


    Oh, but that's not the end.


    A couple of weeks later, either an agent or someone being shown around the house when M wasn't there knocked over a limited edition Lord of the Rings book end and broke it. Between the machete incident and now his property being damaged, M had quite enough and made the landlord promise to confirm all appointments with him first and only show the house when M was there or with the landlord or the landlord's wife being present if M was not home. The landlord's wife pitched a fit, but the landlord agreed to it.

    M managed to find a new place about two months later and moved. A couple of weeks after that someone purchased the house. (not the guy who almost got beheaded)

    It pretty much worked out okay for everyone... landlord sold the property, M ended up doing a rent-to-own thing on his house and is now a proud homeowner, the people in the Cathouse are long since gone, there are no more feral cats in the area, and no one got decapitated.

  • #2
    Unless the lease specified otherwise, the landlord had NO right to enter the apartment if there was no legitimate reason to do so without notice. Showing it to a prospective buyer is NOT such a purpose. As long as your friend was paying his rent, he had the right to determine who could enter that apartment.
    Last edited by South Texan; 08-21-2009, 02:00 AM.
    "Ignorance is no excuse for a law."
    .................................................. ..................- Alfred E. Newman

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    • #3
      Wow....Great to know people respect other people's privacy

      I guess since he was just a renter it didn't matter if they disturbed him or not huh...
      https://www.youtube.com/user/HedgeTV
      Great YouTube channel check it out!

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      • #4
        See, this is why I believe in locks, especially in rented rooms or shared homes.
        "For the love of all that is holy and 4 things that aren’t but feel pretty good anyway" ~ Gravekeeper

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        • #5
          Did the Landlord, the Real Estate agent, or the agent's company at pay for -- or at least offer to pay for -- the broken LOTR bookend? (I say the agent because the prospective buyers were his/her responsibility)
          "For a musician, the SNES sound engine is like using Crayola Crayons. Nobuo Uematsu used Crayola Crayons to paint the Sistine Chapel." - Jeremy Jahns (re: "Dancing Mad")
          "The difference between an amateur and a master is that the master has failed way more times." - JoCat
          "Thinking is difficult, therefore let the herd pronounce judgment!" ~ Carl Jung
          "There's burning bridges, and then there's the lake just to fill it with gasoline." - Wiccy, reddit
          "Retail is a cruel master, and could very well be the most educational time of many people's lives, in its own twisted way." - me
          "Love keeps her in the air when she oughta fall down...tell you she's hurtin' 'fore she keens...makes her a home." - Capt. Malcolm Reynolds, "Serenity" (2005)
          Acts of Gord – Read it, Learn it, Love it!
          "Our psychic powers only work if the customer has a mind to read." - me

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          • #6
            Several years ago, when I was a newlywed, my husband and I rented a 2 bedroom unit in a duplex community. The units were not all owned by the same company, but by various individuals. About 6 months after moving in, we were visiting with some neighbors who had moved in about 2 month before. While talking, the wife mentioned how neat and clean our apartment was. Since they had never been inside our apartment (we were always sitting outside when visiting) I was curious about how she knew this. That was when they told us that when they answered the ad about the apartment, the landlord showed them our apartment, rather than the one that was for rent. Our was identical to theirs. He told them he always showed our apartment when he had one for rent, because he could count on the fact that it would be neat and clean, unlike those of many of our neighbors. After finding that out, we made it clear to the landlord that he was not welcome in our apartment without our permission, and that he certainly was not welcome to bring anybody else in.
            "I guess they see another cash cow just waiting to be dry humped." - Irving Patrick Freleigh

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            • #7
              M should have started sleeping naked in full view of the front door. Maybe then the landlord would have thought twice about coming over unannounced.
              Things just get so crazy living life gets hard to do. I would gladly hit the road, get up and go if I knew,that someday it would bring me back to you.

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              • #8
                Quoth saint View Post
                M should have started sleeping naked in full view of the front door. Maybe then the landlord would have thought twice about coming over unannounced.
                Yeah, I can imagine how visits early in the morning would be prevented this way.
                "I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question."

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                • #9
                  Quoth South Texan View Post
                  Unless the lease specified otherwise, the landlord had NO right to enter the apartment if there was no legitimate reason to do so without notice. Showing it to a prospective buyer is NOT such a purpose. As long as your friend was paying his rent, he had the right to determine who could enter that apartment.


                  What's worse is: the landlord or landlord's wife wasn't even WITH the real estate agent during the first incident. It was just the agent and prospective buyer. Which means the landlord or landlord's wife gave a key to the real estate agency so they could just walk in any time they wanted.

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                  • #10
                    Uuuuuhhhh, yeah, invasion of privacy. They should have called for permission. Glad he got out of there!
                    "If anyone wants this old box containing the broken bits of my former faith in humanity, I'll take your best offer now. You may be able to salvage a few of em' for parts..... " - Quote by Argabarga

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                    • #11
                      This may not have been the showing agent's fault. There can be a lot of miscommunication between real estate companies. If the property was listed with Company A and was being shown by someone from Company B, it's entirely possible that Company B was erroneously told that the property was empty, or that no notice was needed. It's even possible that the landlord specified 24-hour notice to tenants, and that was overlooked.

                      Still doesn't excuse the landlord for not telling tenants the place was on the market, though.
                      Women can do anything men can.
                      But we don't because lots of it's disgusting.
                      Maxine

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                      • #12
                        Quoth EricKei View Post
                        Did the Landlord, the Real Estate agent, or the agent's company at pay for -- or at least offer to pay for -- the broken LOTR bookend? (I say the agent because the prospective buyers were his/her responsibility)

                        Honestly, I don't remember... I'd have to ask my friend. I seem to recall his raising a stink over it and the landlord may have given him a few bucks towards it, but I could be wrong.

                        Quoth saint View Post
                        M should have started sleeping naked in full view of the front door. Maybe then the landlord would have thought twice about coming over unannounced.

                        Yes, but then he could be arrested for brandishing a lethal weapon. (or so I've heard) ZING!
                        Last edited by Broomjockey; 08-21-2009, 09:41 PM. Reason: consecutive posts

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                        • #13
                          This is why I always change the locks. I don't care if I'm renting someone else's house, all the stuff in it is mine, my kids and I sleep here, and I'm the only one that has a key. I change them back to the original locks when I move. I've only had one landlord complain that their key didn't work. He had no answer when I asked why he was trying to get into the house without my knowledge. Busted!

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                          • #14
                            Am I the only person who thinks of the scene in "Neverwhere," where Richard's landlord in the camel-hair suit brings in a couple to see his flat while he's in the shower?
                            PWNADE(TM) - Serve up a glass today! | PWNZER - An act of pwnage so awesome, it's like the victim got hit by a tank.

                            There are only Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse because I choose to walk!

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                            • #15
                              Quoth mandaliz8704 View Post
                              This is why I always change the locks. I don't care if I'm renting someone else's house, all the stuff in it is mine, my kids and I sleep here, and I'm the only one that has a key. I change them back to the original locks when I move. I've only had one landlord complain that their key didn't work. He had no answer when I asked why he was trying to get into the house without my knowledge. Busted!

                              I would support this, but I believe the building owner is legally allowed (or even required) to have a key to get in. It's moreso for emergencies (fire, gas leak, sewage leak, etc.)

                              Although if anyone suspects their landlord is entering their apartment without telling them and it's for suspicious purposes, I would recommend setting up a couple of nanny-cams. They're actually quite cheap.

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