Legal Question in Landlord & Tenant Law in California

i moved out of an apartment 7 months ago and contested not getting back my security deposit they said is was due to damage of the carpet stains and such during my lease we were subject to two sewage floods after the second fllod the managment said they would replace the carpets instead of having them cleaned there was no mention of blame for the fllod upon leaving we recieved a letter stating how much we owed we didnt bother to take pictures because we expected everything else that we might owe to be taken care of by the security deposit in the invoice we were charged for a number of things that we didnt have to pay for most outstanding was the carpet i confronted the management about it they said i was right about everything but the carpet they said they replaced the carpet during my lease and we damaged the second carpet they never replaced the carpet and are now trying to send us to collections i live in san jose ,CA any help would be greatly appreciated


Asked on 5/07/10, 2:20 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

David Gibbs The Gibbs Law Firm, APC

Your option is to sue them in small claims court for return of the deposit amount withheld and/or additional damages for bad-faith retention of the deposit. Was the accounting mailed to you within 21 days of your move-out? Did they offer to conduct a walk-through prior to move-out to review the condition of the apartment? Read California Civil Code �1950.5 for the technical requirements imposed on the landlord for use of your security deposit. If they did not comply, then take them to Small Claims Court. The biggest problem you will have is proving the condition of the apartment. You need to always document the condition of the property when you move out for just this reason. Seven months after the fact, it will be tough to prove to a judge that you were not responsible for the damage. The landlord almost certainly has pictures as well as receipts for the carpet, so your evidence of not having caused the damage is going to be limited to your word, and that might not prevail.

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Answered on 5/19/10, 4:44 pm


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