Seriously, what is wrong with business these days and the people managing them?
Sounds to me like the property owners are some real San Antonio sh*tbirds. Geez. People are azhos these days.
So, has the executor of the estate cleaned out the Apartment?
Reminds me of:
Our new foreman is Dan McCann
I’ll tell you sure, He was a blamed mean man
Last week a premature blast went off
And a mile in the air went big Jim Goff.
Next time payday comes around
Jim Goff was short one buck he found
“What for?” asked he, then this reply
“You were docked for the time you were up in the sky.”
Just a guess, that the property owners are not originally from Texas, or any of the states. They don’t feel much of a connection with their tenants.
Giving government ideas......
I was going to ask what the terms of the lease were and what was the law. The article answered that, this the author appears to have committed real journalism instead of just outrage building click bait. Bad author! Bad author!
future rent? 🤔
the rental contract was with the mom
not with the family
son needs to tell them to pound sand
The apartment agency could file a claim against the estate.
Now whether they are that low down and sleazy remains to be seen.
If you pay the break lease fee, there should be no future rent payment needed.
The leasing company isn’t ‘attacking’ the kin. They are going after the estate which they believe still has legal obligations to it. That said, what it is doing is despicable.
The leasing company isn’t ‘attacking’ the kin. They are going after the estate which they believe still has legal obligations to it. That said, what it is doing is despicable.
I lost my job back in around 2011 and after many moths of floating on my 401k and unemployment, I fell behind on the lease on my apartment.
I was behind a month but had not received an eviction notice as yet, but I kept in constant touch with them.
Even though I was only halfway through my annual lease term, after I informed the management company about my situation, they allowed me to terminate my lease early. They kept my security deposit, which I had no problem with them doing and said rather than owning the full balance of my lease term, that I only owed 3 months of additional rent as an early lease termination.
I had lived there for over 6 years, and I was never once late with my rent and never had any complaints about me, etc.
So, I made arrangements with them to pay off the 3 months of rent over the course of the next 6 months, which I did diligently every month until it fully paid off.
After consideration of how clean and in such good condition I’d left the apartment in, they refunded half of my security deposit to me which I didn’t expect.
I actually got a letter from the management company thanking me for being such a good tenant and taking such good care of my apartment.
Two years ago, when I was again looking for an apartment, I applied to this same apartment complex, and they approved my application.
When my dad unexpectedly died in 1997, he had recently purchased a new car.
I informed the finance company of his death, provided a copy of his death certificate and made arrangements to return the car back to the dealership where he had bought it.
I figured the loan company might want to sue his estate or me for the loan balance even though I was not a signatory on the loan, but he was living with me at the time. His estate which was pretty much nonexistent, after his life insurance that barely paid his funeral expenses, there was nothing left, but they didn’t.
They accepted my returning the car and wrote off the balance and I never heard from them again.
Landlord Says Woman Broke Her Lease by Dying - Wants $15K from Her
by Steve Lehto
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LEiZniNt1eU
Apartment Complex Drops Claim for Future Rent From Tenant Who Died - UPDATE
by Steve Lehto
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_B6QTQPnm6w
Great advertisement to lure in future tenants.
“we will keep you in, even if you happened to die!”
I think, I would avoid their place!
Check location
They didn't.
Once the news became public they backed down.
Which seems to be the only way to get a company to behave sensibly once they have embarked on a course of insanity.
“The Lodge at Shavano Park apartments in San Antonio, Texas, wasn’t about to let 91-year-old Sanda Bonilla out of her lease for some lame excuse like dying. “
Good, after all ‘deadbeats’ shouldn’t be tolerated.
Sub lease to a large family of illegals…..