Do my parents have any renter’s rights without a lease?

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Do my parents have any renter’s rights without a lease?

My parents have been living in a rental house for 14 years with no lease though the owners verbally agreed to reimburse for improvements. The roof has been leaking from the beginning and now pours rain in several rooms is rotting and sagging and threatening collapse. My parents cannot afford to move. Without a lease is there anything we can do to hold these landlords accountable for this condemnable house? What rights do my parents have? They are 60 years old.

Asked on December 6, 2011 under Real Estate Law, Mississippi

Answers:

SJZ, Member, New York Bar / FreeAdvice Contributing Attorney

Answered 12 years ago | Contributor

Your parents have a lease--just not a written one. When there is no written lease, the rental is pursuant to an oral (often called verbal) lease.

Anyone who rents, whether by an oral or written lease, has rights. For example, the landlord has the obligation to provide premises that are fit to be lived in (this is called the "implied warranty of habitability"). If the landlord does not, and major roof leaks could easily be a violation, the tenants could sue the landlord for compensation for the time they have been living with the problem; they could also sue for a court order forcing the landlord to make the repairs.

That's the good news. The bad news is that as tenants under an oral lease, your parents are month-to-month tenants. That means that the landlord could terminate their tenancy--make them move--on 30 days notice if the  landlord chose.


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