Hi thanks in advance if you have stopped and for reading. My daughter was at university, had a terrible time accessing the facilities and course (another matter!) and subsequently has left to go on another course in September. However before she had decided to leave, she signed a tenancy agreement as part of a shared house with 3 other students with a tenancy due to start late August 2022. She rang the agent in March who in no uncertain terms told her tough & she would be responsible for the rent if she didn't fill the room with someone else. So given that the other people who are part of the contract wanted someone they could live with, they went about trying to find someone else, and by all accounts they have, and this is now the issue...because the agent won't confirm that this is the case, my daughter has written to them on two occasions asking if they can clarify the position in writing but they have not. Is there anything that she could do to ensure & get confirmation from the agent that she is now free from the contract? NB it was only the one person dropping out of the accommodation, no one else has. Thanks again!
student accommodation tenancy issue
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is your daughter in contact with the other students? Will they tell her if someone has taken her place in the house?
Lawyer (solicitor) - retired from practice, now supervising solicitor in a university law clinic. I do not advise by private message.
Litigants in Person should download and read the Judiciary's handbook for litigants in person: https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/..._in_Person.pdf
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Originally posted by dslippy View PostThe landlord has no obligation to agree to this, sorry.
Student tenancies are often a mess in this way. Somehow if sometimes works out.
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Do you know whether this person is paying rent?
Did your daughtrt pay a deposit? Has this new person also paid a deposit, and if so, to whom?Lawyer (solicitor) - retired from practice, now supervising solicitor in a university law clinic. I do not advise by private message.
Litigants in Person should download and read the Judiciary's handbook for litigants in person: https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/..._in_Person.pdf
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Originally posted by atticus View PostDo you know whether this person is paying rent?
Did your daughtrt pay a deposit? Has this new person also paid a deposit, and if so, to whom?
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If the new tenant has signed a tenancy then it is likely that that new tenancy replaces the old one. Bt sometimes landlords have a series of individual contracts with each tenant.
Your daughter should get a opy of each contract and put it with the correspondence.
If a deposit has been paid threaten to take him to the appropriate deposit protection scheme.
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Tell the landlord to grow up.Lawyer (solicitor) - retired from practice, now supervising solicitor in a university law clinic. I do not advise by private message.
Litigants in Person should download and read the Judiciary's handbook for litigants in person: https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/..._in_Person.pdf
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How else would you tell him?Last edited by atticus; 26th June 2022, 21:48:PM.Lawyer (solicitor) - retired from practice, now supervising solicitor in a university law clinic. I do not advise by private message.
Litigants in Person should download and read the Judiciary's handbook for litigants in person: https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/..._in_Person.pdf
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read the thread, Huxie. See the questions and answers. Dslippy gave the advice I would have given had he not got there first. This landlord is being unreasonable, and needs to be told that.Lawyer (solicitor) - retired from practice, now supervising solicitor in a university law clinic. I do not advise by private message.
Litigants in Person should download and read the Judiciary's handbook for litigants in person: https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/..._in_Person.pdf
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Originally posted by atticus View Postread the thread, Huxie. See the questions and answers. Dslippy gave the advice I would have given had he not got there first. This landlord is being unreasonable, and needs to be told that.
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How would you make someone do what he refuses to do? The answer is to tell the landlord or agent to grow up: of course the OP's daughter's obligations are at an end, every fact points to that unavoidable conclusion. I suspect that the desperation to get the landlord to acknowledge what he cannot realistically deny may cause the landlord to think he may have something to gain by not answering.Lawyer (solicitor) - retired from practice, now supervising solicitor in a university law clinic. I do not advise by private message.
Litigants in Person should download and read the Judiciary's handbook for litigants in person: https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/..._in_Person.pdf
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