How to report a nasty Property Manager who abuses/misuses his authority?
I recently bought a bachelor apartment, and when I'm away, I rent it out short-term. The property manager found out, and took away my access to most facilities in the condo. I informed him that I am no longer renting it out, but he still refused to open access. In fact, he's doing everything he can to turn the board against me, maligning me, and even waste the condo lawyer's time to write me legal papers.
I wanted to report his malicious conduct to the property management company that hired his service, but he won't provide the info.
Where can I file this report?
Answer:
As a Realtor, I report to a state agency.
Look up the Real Estate Board (of your state)... And see if they have any authority over the condo board.
As spiteful as I am, I would tell you to stop paying dues (if you can't use the features, why pay)... However, they might be able to recover in court.
But if that happens-- Tell the judge that they stopped you from using the features-- But you had to pay for it.. and see what he says...
However, if you wish to push the issue-- speak to an attorney of your own.. and have him/her write nasty letters back.
-Jason
you can go to the condo board it self to request the information, but unfortunately it may be waste of time
my bet is it was against the condo by laws to rent out your condo and you got caught and punished, so right of the bat not good for your side
if you have complied with the rules, then by your ownership rights you have every right to the facilities, i would demand restatement of the rights or holding the property manager and the condo board liable for their actions
Sounds like you are ignoring the fact that most rental property cannot be sub-leased like you did. You broke the rental contract. His carrying out what was signed is not "malicious"...it is his job. Is he supposed to lose his job?
No one will support you when you broke the rules...but you can get an attorney who might be able to get a new one written for you.
Depending on the contract you have, if you rented without the permission of the company and it states no subleasing to anyone, you're screwed. If you bought this place and didn't look into the property management rules before hand you can only plead your case and maybe sign an agreement not to do it again or they can take any action reasonably against you. If there was no legal agreement on paper between them and you, and you were unaware of any problems, start calling lawyers for a reference or legal aid to refer you to someone that can help. If you're renting and don't own this, then I'd be packing before they pull your rug out from under you.
check your local rental board, you have many rights
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