Advice please! Resident caught her oven on fire because it was so dirty. We replaced it with a used one in inventory . Resident is unhappy because it has some chips in the top of the electric stove. It works fine- just has a few blemishes. Told the Resident (in so many words) that she was at fault and she gets what she gets for a replacement. She is NOT happy! Thoughts? Feedback?
I'm not sure why you didn't evict there should be something in your lease that backs up negligence and fire that could have cost lives as well as property loss
It was never her stove, therefore never her choice what its replaced with. Honestly, i wouldnt have replaced it until she paid full replacement cost for new one. She can file a renter insurance claim if she wants a new one!!
She should be grateful you provided a used one at no cost. If she is not happy with that let her know once payment is received you’d be happy to order it for her.
She lucky I know some maintenance guys that would have pulled that old one out cleaned it up changed out some parts repainted it and put it right back in
Create an invoice for the damages and service fees for causing the fire. State that you were showing mercy and compassion and provided one free of cost, seeing as she is not content ask her to pay for the X stove that (you as landlord would have replaced it with) and that you will get it to as soon as X date.Alternatively. Give her the opportunity to buy her own and take it when she moves out.
If she wants a new stove she pays difference for prorated amount of depreciation on how old last stove was. Can not charge her new price on used stove.I had similar thing happen. My resident bought new stove that she took upon moving because she wanted brand new.
Just give her the option to take that one or she buys a new one. When we replace appliances and make the tenant pay we give them the option to keep the old appliance.
I would have charged her for the damaged one and still would have given her a used one if that’s all we had available. She doesn’t get to call the shots and beggars can’t be choosers. She rents the unit, she doesn’t own it, so who cares if an appliance has blemishes?
Did you charge her for the replacement appliance? If not then she gets whatever you have on hand. If you plan to charge her then I would order a new one and she pays full price. Hopefully she has renter's insurance.
If she didn’t pay for a new stove she doesn’t get a brand new one. Now if she wants to pay for the brand new replacement, let her. And if she damages that one charge her again
You should have replaced it and charged her for it, if she does it again (because she doesn't like what you gave her) you've already set the tone that irs free. Also, she is a renter, we provide a working stove it doesn't have to be brand new, when she is an owner she can buy herself whatever she wants.
Perhaps she needs a reminder she caused a fire and destroyed the last one. Maybe in a year when her oven stays clean there will be a new one available.
She can pay for a brand new stove (and no, she won’t take it with her hen she moves out - I might even have her sign something indicating she understands that prior to installing it).
Cindy Back me too . I would give her that option . Just say because your Stove caught on fire due to not being cleaned , if we get a new one we will have to charge you
Did you charge her for the new stove? And what would her thoughts be if she was the one who had to replace it. In my opinion if she doesn’t want to purchase her own new stove oven she should be grateful y’all replaced it since it was her fault.
1 year 5 months ago#640306by Casey N Aaron Enriquez
Order a new one and charge her for the prorated loss. Add a serious lease violation for care and use as well. If it was bad I might even schedule periodic inspection if it was a safety issue.
She (or her renters insurance) should be buying a new appliance, but that doesn’t mean it should go into her apartment. Replacement cost of the appliance she destroyed. And at minimum a cure or quit for housekeeping and property damage. If she wants a new stove for her place, she can buy her own.
We would replace with new but make them pay based on the fact it’s negligence. We had someone burn the oven and someone break the knob so it was just an open flame. We had different scenarios in which people basically almost burnt the units and in some instances we replaced smoke detectors at their expense.
The inside of her oven was so filthy it caught fire, but she has a problem with a couple of minor cosmetic blemishes on the outside of the replacement? I am so sick of cleaning ovens, I doubled the security deposit deduction maximum amount (I'm a small Landlord). I now include a cookie sheet the same size as the oven interior (I have 2 oven sizes on site) in every new resident welcome package. When we do the walk through at their move-in, I point out the welcome gifts and I tell them that the cookie sheet is intended to be kept in the oven at all times, to help them keep the oven clean. I also tell them how high the oven/stove cleaning security deposit deductions can be. And that they won't have to be concerned about those charges if they do just 2 simple things to keep their oven clean: (1) Put the cookie sheet under food in the oven, and (2) Cover food that is in the oven. Simple. Filthy ovens are completely unnecessary, and, as demonstrated in the author's post, are dangerous. I am sorry you're getting blow back, but I am beginning to believe that many residents will only take the Lease violation seriously, and modify their behavior, if money comes out of their pocketbook. To those who may think this is severe, my policy is to have a conversation with a resident first, and if the same violation happens again, they get a Lease violation letter.
You know, it occurs to me that you can tell the resident. "No worries, the way you keep house you soon wont be able to see those blemishes, its all good!!!"