Tenant who subleased room and kept up to five cats ordered to leave rental

Date:

Share post:


An ACT tenant who leased a room in her landlord’s property on Booking.com and housed up to five cats without permission has been ordered to leave the property.

In a recent ruling by the ACT Civil and Administrative Tribunal (ACAT), the tenant was ordered to vacate the home following violations of the Residential Tenancies Act.

The tenant was found to have engaged in unauthorised activities, including leasing a room through Booking.com and housing up to five cats the landlord didn’t approve, according to ABC News.

The case highlights the tenant’s breach of the Standard Residential Tenancy Terms.

Specifically, she sublet parts of the apartment via Booking.com without seeking approval from the landlord.

Additionally, ACAT discovered the tenant had kept “possibly four or five” cats since as early as June 2023 without prior permission, further contravening the lease agreement.

During the tribunal, the tenant conceded to subleasing a room on the accommodation-sharing platform for several months, ceasing only after receiving a notice to rectify her actions.

She argued she did not know she had to have approval, despite having sought permission for a similar arrangement in Queensland five years prior.

The landlord challenged the cessation of the sublease, providing evidence of continued activity until early this year.

However, the tenant presented emails indicating an attempt to terminate her Booking.com account before October 2023.

Despite these efforts, ACAT ruled the breaches as unresolved within an acceptable timeframe, resulting in the termination of her tenancy.

Adding complexity to the case, the landlord, who is severely allergic to cat hair, provided photographs and testimonies indicating the presence of multiple cats in the property since mid-2023.

Although the tenant later requested permission to keep the cats, it was only after a breach notice had been issued.

The landlord also accused the tenant of making false statements on her tenancy application concerning her pet ownership, which the tribunal found plausible given the tenant’s known relationship with cats.

In defense, the tenant argued her pets were with a friend and her frequent work-related travels precluded the need for disclosure.

Nevertheless, the tribunal was convinced of a misrepresentation, especially considering the tenant’s cat-sitting and fostering activities.

Significantly, the tribunal noted the health implications for the landlord, who provided medical evidence of severe allergies to cat and horse hair.

With plans to return from London and occupy the apartment later in the year, the landlord argued the presence of cats posed a substantial health risk, although she acknowledged failing to notify the tenant of her return.



Source link

Nicole Lambert
Nicole Lambert
Nicole Lamber is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes about arts, entertainment, lifestyle, and home news. Nicole has been a journalist for years and loves to write about what's going on in the world.

Recent posts

Related articles

Darren Krakowiak: A guide to deciding with your gut, head and heart

Commercial real estate agents make thousands of decisions every day. While many of these choices are made...

Are safe rooms the modern home’s new ‘must-have’ feature?

Once purely the domain of Hollywood films, safe rooms are becoming an increasingly popular property feature, both...

Matthew Perry’s Hollywood Hills villa back on the market

In October 2023, the world lost the talented Matthew Perry at the age of 54. Prior to...

Four Australian cities among the world’s wealthiest

Sydney has been named one of the world’s wealthiest cities, with 147,000 millionaires calling the Harbour City...

Community and compassion: how Matt Plunkett uses his real estate skills for charity

Matt Plunkett’s no stranger to calling an auction, but there are a few each year that mean...

Matthew Harvey joins Clarke & Humel on Sydney’s Northern Beaches

Clarke & Humel has embarked on the next phase of its growth strategy, appointing distinguished industry leader,...

REA Group reports surge in revenue growth

REA Group’s revenue has spiked 20 per cent on the back of strong Australian residential and commercial...

Get more from your CRM, WA’s $5K rental carrot, Matt Lahood on making clients feel important, plus news and more

(c) Elite Agent 2024. All rights reserved. No portion of this website can be reproduced, copied or...