JUSTICE FOR LANDLORDS!

JUSTICE FOR LANDLORDS!

19:05 PM, 21st September 2020, About 4 years ago 84

Text Size

The sustained attack on private landlords has intensified during the Covid-19 epidemic and is now off the scale in terms of the injustice being perpetuated against landlords.

Some of the key injustices are identified below. These merit a decisive response from the bodies representing landlords and letting agents. They need to urgently investigate every conceivable legal action against the Government:

  1. Justice delayed is justice denied, but even more so for landlords who perhaps uniquely face accruing debts for each month the legal process denies us possession of our own property.

In my article last week I estimated a minimum of 14 months to evict non-paying tenants: Click here

However, although the Government had made a point of ‘conceding’ 4 weeks’ notice would be sufficient when the tenant is 6 months in arrears, it is now clear this was a false promise. In fact, in another directive to the courts, it was stated that only when arrears reach 12 months, should the court prioritise the case. In other words, cases will be put at the bottom of the pile until that point.

This means landlords will lose at least a further 6 months’ rent, making a total of 20 months, or £16,000 arrears. This is an outrage, especially as in most cases landlords will never recover this money that the Government is forcing us to lose.

  1. Where is the legal and moral justification for legislating that one party in a dispute should have an in-depth knowledge of another’s affairs and circumstances?

The Government now expects landlords to have an in-depth knowledge of their tenants’ experience of Covid-19.  Interestingly, knowledge of other illnesses such as terminal cancer is not required – and never has been.  It is not clear if the landlord is to be punished with an adjournment if they are unable to obtain this knowledge; which is highly likely as it is completely against the interests of the other party to comply if it means they are more likely to get evicted.

The implication is also there that if a tenant has had any misfortune related to Covid-19 (something it would be unlikely for someone to NOT have) they may be given a stay of execution of a possession order, regardless of the level of their arrears. This introduces the idea that non-payment of the contracted rent is no longer a ground for possession. Given this, why would a tenant who already has a poor credit rating ever pay rent again, when they might be able to get at least 2 years rent-free accommodation?  (see the case below)

The Government hasn’t legislated for the same rule to apply to landlords’ mortgage payments, where contractual arrangements will not be undermined by Government edict.  Indeed, in the retail sector it has been pointed out that, ‘while landlords are constrained from collecting what is owed to them, there is nothing to stop banks becoming more aggressive.’ Click here

For both residential and commercial sectors the Government seems to be acting on the principle that if a tenant is experiencing difficulty of any kind, they no longer have to pay their bills, possibly indefinitely.

So now one party in a dispute (tenants) can have their ‘illnesses’ and other misfortunes (real or lied about) taken into consideration, whilst there is no consideration of the other party’s (landlords’) experience of covid-19.

  1. Who is the implied victim according to these measures?

Is the victim the one who owes thousands of pounds and in many cases is wrecking the property they live in which doesn’t belong to them or is it the person who is owed thousands and has to wait, helpless, losing hundreds or thousands more every month?

To take a real example, landlord, Bansi Soni explained the predicament she is now in:

‘So I have the tenant from hell. She hasn’t paid any rent for 5 months (totalling over £8k) and refuses to tell me what benefits she’s on. She says she doesn’t care if she gets a CCJ as she has bad credit anyway. She says it’s no skin off her nose and she’ll stay put till she’s thrown out. I offered to forgive her her rent arrears and return her full deposit if she leaves but she’s refused.’

Bansi goes on to say that she is unwell and on dialysis. At the time of writing, she had a fever of 40 degrees but was unable to sleep it off because of the worry.

Another landlord on social media said her tenant hadn’t paid a penny in 16 months and that as a consequence she has nearly lost her home. This landlord said the worry – along with nursing a sick child during the pandemic has nearly killed her.

Similar stories are to be found all over social media and comments sections under newspaper articles.

  1. This is one-sided legislation which will lead some landlords to lose their property.

The Government is fixated on tenants – quite likely for purely political motives – and is not giving landlords’ concerns one iota of consideration, not even acknowledging the intolerable strain many landlords are under. Instead, it is introducing actual communist policies, as an assault on private property rights is. This is no exaggeration as a landlord effectively has their property expropriated when they lose all power over it. In this situation, the landlord can’t earn an income from their property, they can’t move into it and they can’t sell it. They have lost all power over it.  At the same time, they must pay the bills on it and follow all the legislation, even repairing responsibilities in cases where tenants are not paying and may even be wrecking the property.

As has been seen, some landlords face also losing their own home as they struggle to pay their personal outgoings and also foot the bill for others. Finally, they may have to sell losing all their previous equity because of the huge losses from unpaid rent and damage, combined with the effects of Section 24 (often paying tax on an imaginary profit).

  1. What about impartiality in the law?

How can the Government get away with this knee-jerk, one-sided legislation, unchallenged?  Where has the principle of impartiality gone?  Unfortunately though, even if these laws had to go through parliament – which they don’t at the moment – the politicians would still wave them through as they pathetically chase the tenant vote.

The Government, however, needs to be reminded that impartiality is a principle of justice, holding that decisions should be based on objective criteria, rather than on the basis of bias, prejudice, or preferring the benefit to one person over another for improper reasons.

The Government has clearly abandoned that idea, showing no consideration for how many landlords will be ruined by its actions. It is also working in tandem with Shelter, Generation Rent and even Momentum, with its attack on the basic premise of protecting private property rights; behaving like a bastardised version of Robin Hood – bastardised, because many landlords are far from wealthy and some tenants are very well-off indeed.

In addition, as has been pointed out elsewhere in the context of the retail sector, ‘there is concern that extending the [eviction] moratorium until the end of the year undermines the concept of rent as a contractual obligation.’ Landlords quake as the roof falls in on values  So the Government is undermining property rights as well as contractual rights and responsibilities.

  1. The Government is now proposing tenants can remain for a longer period, not paying rent, if their particular landlord is less dependent on the rental income than another landlord.

We now have the idea that the length of arrears needed before a landlord can take action depends on the landlord’s income. How is that relevant? Why should rogue tenants get longer in properties (12 months minimum) if their landlord is a bit better off, but be out more quickly (with 9 months’ rent arrears) if the landlord is worse off? That the Government thinks it is okay for landlords to go without rent for 9-12 months before starting possession proceedings is already unprecedented. Supermarkets aren’t being told they must supply their services for 12-24 months, free of charge, so where is the legal and moral justification for forcing landlords to do this?   Means-testing landlords in order to make a decision about how much their rogue tenant is allowed to rip them off really demonstrates how off-the-scale the Government has gone with its lunacy.

  1. Further attempts to undermine justice.

As if this is not enough, it is almost laughable to see that an SNP MP, Chris Stephens is trying with a private members bill to prevent evictions of anyone on Universal Credit for rent arrears. In other words, if a landlord has a tenant on benefits they could look forward to never being paid, indefinitely.

Rather amusingly this somewhat clashes with Shelter’s campaign to force landlords to accept people on benefits, with the argument they present no greater risk than working tenants. They will do if Chris Stephens gets his way and although such a law would be absurd, this offers no comfort to landlords as we are now used to Alice in Wonderland legislation, that one would expect from a ‘lunatic dictator.’ Click here

With new, inscrutable procedures added, including delaying tactics of ‘review hearings’, and a new demand that landlords ‘reactivate’ cases they never deactivated (many will be caught out by this), do they not realise this will most hurt the worst-off tenants as landlords will be completely paranoid about whom they are able to trust with the keys to their property?

To conclude, with injustice piled upon injustice and thoroughly biased legislation being brought in with an almost frenetic frequency, it is time to act.  I already have a name for this campaign – ‘Justice for Landlords.’  And I now call upon the landlord and letting agent bodies of the UK, both national and local to challenge the legality of these measures.  All landlords and letting agents should be calling on their representative bodies to do this.

I would add that there is no point in these associations asking their members to write to their MPs – which seems to be a stock response. This has got us absolutely nowhere. It is also not enough to ask for funds to compensate some landlords for unjust legal measures applied to them. We need to force the Government into a u-turn, using the full force of the law.


Share This Article


Comments

Mick Roberts

6:03 AM, 27th September 2020, About 4 years ago

Someone can be allowed to not pay for a service for 12 months before u can take any action on them. This will make many more Landlords pack up. I've love to fly on airline for 12 months free without paying, holidays galore.
And yes, preparing a statement the effect Covid 19 has on them, let's all walk into shops & not pay & shout Coivd is hurting me, I'm allowed to not pay.
A lot of tenants aren't gonna' be paying soon cause of this. And we're hearing stories this is already happening.
Yes, this will be getting the Govt votes off tenants, but as we know, Hurt the Landlord, u hurt the tenant, they will be worse off after all this, as they have been last few years with all the daft onerous legislation & costs put on Landlords.
I'm taking a positive out of a negative, my tenants can't move any more cause Landlords won't take 'em & there is less houses round here now for rent, so I have no doing up between tenants & no admin costs etc. My repairs bill has gone right down.
Ha ha u joking about this SNP MP Chris Stephens surely? Wow, he's suddenly made loads more UC tenants not be able to get houses.

Jon Elkins

6:59 AM, 27th September 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Dr Rosalind Beck at 23/09/2020 - 22:00
Dr Rosalind beck,
I happy to stand in front of anyone, regarding my case, 2 years no rent, January 2020, second application to possession,.march lock down, August 2020 possession granted, September 2020, told by the court, come back in March 2021 before bailiff can evict.
This is getting beyond a joke, who would ever call this justice..
A just giving page great idea, like crowd funding.

Ian Simpson

9:00 AM, 27th September 2020, About 4 years ago

Another great article by Dr Beck. Sadly, however, nothing will change and the govt is obviously hell-bent on completely obliterating the PRS once and for all. The NRLA seem a total waste of space. Their latest glossy shows their new Exec council - who voted for them? Why isn't someone like Dr Beck or Paul Shamplina on this committee?

It is all incredibly depressing and clearly, no way at all out of the prison cell of being a landlord at the moment!! Even trying to sell up seems impossible.

123Landlord

10:52 AM, 27th September 2020, About 4 years ago

I've just come across Ben Beadle's (CEO NRLA) article on LandlordZone, 23/09/20. I don't know what the rules are for positing external links on here, but I'll have a go:
https://www.landlordzone.co.uk/lz-voice/funding-package-vital-to-keep-tenants-in-homes/
About 1/2 way through the article Ben says he's been part of a "judicial working party ... [not to] change the law, but to look at the process and decide how best to open the courts, to ensure landlords already have access to justice under the existing legislative framework."
So it seems the government has gone through a process where they've involved representative groups before they've decided what to do. If I'm right in thinking JR can only challenge the process, I don't think there's a challenge to be made.

Antony Wood

13:18 PM, 27th September 2020, About 4 years ago

As ever a very erudite analysis from Dr Rosalind that sets out the current position affecting all landlords at this point in time, so what to do. Well we can all hang separately or together seems to be the choice, not a very pleasant prospect I think most would agree I see little choice but to put our hands collectively into our pockets and fund a challenge to the government to reverse this crazy legislation and give both parties a just and proper arrangement to settle disputes as the law stands at the moment it is an outrage to a so called democratic society. I for one would be prepared to pay into the fund and I echo others who think Dr Beck would be a very strong advocate in our call for justice.

TheBiggerPicture

13:39 PM, 27th September 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Antony Wood at 27/09/2020 - 13:18The government have practical and political reasons to punish landlords.
Challenging the current law is a good approach for dealing with the symptom, but it doesn't deal with the cause.
The government would just revise the law, or hit us elsewhere.
Politicians are using landlords like fodder, as we have no-where else to turn. Without organising into a voting block we will just be fending against a small wave in a ocean of unreasonable attacks. (Landlords have been discriminated against for not being able to claim interest or enforce contracts).
We need to organise as a block, and commit to vote for a party that will not take a biased approach.
Remember - very far from a majority voted for UKIP, but it forced the conservatives to have a referendum and then leave the EU.
I suspect that the Brexit party would be sympathetic to our cause and would welcome our votes. You only need to have enough votes to control the margin at an election and MPs will change their tune.
Threatening as a block to vote in this way, whether you support that party or not is likely to have more long lasting benefits for us, and costs us almost nothing.
Even if the Brexit party were not to support us, the chance of losing significant votes would give us a voice.
(For disclosure - not a member of any party and have no links to any party.)

TrevL

21:22 PM, 27th September 2020, About 4 years ago

Three options for the government to deal with non-paying tenents:
*Allow evictions = Tory's lose next election for being the nasty party
* Raise general taxes and pay tenents rents which will be packaged as a bail out for landlords by the guardian = Tory's lose next election
* Target direct tax on LL, via preventing evictions = Everyone's happy, except for a few landlords who lose their pensions.

Although legally in the right LL's are the patsy....the gov't will just change the law if challenged, it's the easiest option and sellable to the general electorate.

Whiteskifreak Surrey

21:29 PM, 27th September 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by TrevL at 27/09/2020 - 21:22
Where is our Boris, the Landlords' friend? Didn't majority of us voted for him, because he was supposed to be a breath of fresh air for us? Turned up to be on the Labour level, if not worse.

Kabs

23:11 PM, 27th September 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Jon Elkins at 27/09/2020 - 06:59
I have a so called tenant in my property she has not paid rent since February 2019. She lives with her mum but holding my property without paying any rent. Court granted eviction in march 2020. Still waiting for bailiffs this is ridiculous.

TheMaluka

8:09 AM, 28th September 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Kabs at 27/09/2020 - 23:11
It can get worse, I have a property which is empty but with a tenancy in place. I have just issued a section 21 with six months notice and eventually will have to apply to the court for possession. Meanwhile the local authority are trying to charge me council tax at the full rate.

Leave Comments

In order to post comments you will need to Sign In or Sign Up for a FREE Membership

or

Don't have an account? Sign Up

Landlord Tax Planning Book Now