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Wikipedia

Landlord

A landlord is the owner of a house, apartment, condominium, land, or real estate which is rented or leased to an individual or business, who is called a tenant (also a lessee or renter). When a juristic person is in this position, the term landlord is used. Other terms include lessor, housing provider, and owner. The term landlady may be used for the female owners. The manager of a pub in the United Kingdom, strictly speaking a licensed victualler, is referred to as the landlord/landlady. In political economy it refers to the owner of natural resources alone (e.g., land, not buildings) from which an economic rent, a form of passive income,[1] is the income received.

Powerful landlord in chariot, Eastern Han 25–220 CE. Hebei, China

History edit

 
David Berry owned much of what is now known as his namesake town of Berry.

The concept of a landlord may be traced back to the feudal system of manoralism (seignorialism), where a landed estate is owned by a Lord of the Manor (mesne lords), usually members of the lower nobility which came to form the rank of knights in the high medieval period, holding their fief via subinfeudation, but in some cases the land may also be directly subject to a member of higher nobility, as in the royal domain directly owned by a king, or in the Holy Roman Empire imperial villages directly subject to the emperor. The medieval system ultimately continues the system of villas and latifundia (peasant-worked broad farmsteads) of the Roman Empire.[2]

In modern times, "landlord" describes any individual, or entity such as a government body or an institution, who charges rent to a person living in a home they do not own.

Owner and tenant responsibilities edit

A rental agreement, or lease, is the contract defining such terms as the price paid, penalties for late payments, the length of the rental or lease, and the amount of notice required before either the homeowner or tenant cancels the agreement. In general, responsibilities are given as follows: the homeowner is responsible for making repairs and performing property maintenance, and the tenant is responsible for keeping the property clean and safe.

Many owners hire a property management company to take care of all the details of renting their property out to a tenant. This usually includes advertising the property and showing it to prospective tenants, negotiating and preparing the written leases or license agreements,[3][4] and then, once rented, collecting rent from the tenant and performing repairs as needed.

United States edit

In the United States, residential homeowner–tenant disputes are primarily governed by state law (not federal law) regarding property and contracts. State law and, in some places, city law or county law, sets the requirements for eviction of a tenant. Generally, there are a limited number of reasons for which a landlord or landlady can evict his or her tenant before the expiration of the tenancy, though at the end of the lease term the rental relationship can generally be terminated without giving any reason. Some cities, counties, and states have laws establishing the maximum rent a landlord can charge, known as rent control, or rent regulation, and related eviction. There is also an implied warranty of habitability, whereby a landlord must maintain safe, decent and habitable housing, meeting minimum safety requirements such as smoke detectors and a locking door. The most common disputes result from either the landlord's failure to provide services or the tenant's failure to pay rent—the former can also lead to the latter. The withholding of rent is justifiable cause for eviction, as often explained in the lease.[5] City ordinances can also play a role in renting policy, such as the rise in source-of-income anti-discrimination ordinances.[6][7] Tenants unions also affect housing policy when organized politically.[8]

Canada edit

In Canada, residential homeowner–tenant disputes are primarily governed by provincial law (not federal law) regarding property and contracts. Provincial law sets the requirements for eviction of a tenant. Generally, there are a limited number of reasons for which a landlord can evict a tenant. Some provinces have laws establishing the maximum rent a landlord can charge, known as rent control, or rent regulation, and related eviction. There is also an implied warranty of habitability, whereby a landlord must maintain safe, decent and habitable housing, meeting minimum safety requirements.

United Kingdom edit

Residential rental market (tenancies) edit

Private sector renting is largely governed by many of the Landlord and Tenant Acts, in particular the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 which sets bare minimum standards in tenants' rights against their landlords. Another key statute is the Housing Act 2004. Rents can be freely increased at the end of a usual six-month duration, on proper notice given to the tenant. A Possession Order under the most common type, the assured shorthold tenancy (AST) is usually obtainable after eight weeks/two months of unpaid rent, and at the court's discretion after serving the tenant with a Section 8 notice (under the Housing Act 1988 as amended) for a lesser period for all assured tenancies, and on other grounds which defer to the landlord's ownership of the property. If the tenancy is an AST then any possession order will not take effect until six months has passed into the initial tenancy. A tenancy of someone who has been in occupation since before 15 January 1989 usually, if not a shorthold from the outset following their inception from 1980 onwards, may be a "regulated tenancy" with many more rights, especially under the Rent Act 1977 and Protection from Eviction Act 1977, introduced by the Third Wilson ministry.[9]

Each house in multiple occupation, a unit the law does not regard it as a single household having more than three tenants, is subject to enhanced regulations including the Housing Act 2004. A council-issued licence to be a landlord of such a unit is always required in some local authorities (in others, limited to the larger statutory examples).

Residential leasehold edit

Tenancies above a couple of years are normally called leases and tend to be lengthy; if more than seven years a new leasehold estate must be registered.[10] These are governed by few of the above rules and are in longer examples deliberately more akin to full ownership than tenancies, in general. They seldom require a sizeable ground rent. The law has not regulated hefty break/resale charges nor does it prevent the sale of leasehold houses; in the 2010s certain of these proposals have been widely consulted upon and are being drafted. Broadly, legislation allows such lessees (tenants) to club together to gain the Right to Manage, and the right to buy the landlord's interest (to collectively enfranchise). It allows them individually to extend their leases for a new, smaller sum ("premium"), which if the tenants have enfranchised will not normally be demanded/recommended every 15–35 years. Notice requirements and forms tend to be strict. In smaller examples the tenant, depending on a simple mathematical division of the building, may be able to enfranchise individually. Statute of 1925 implies into nearly all leases (tenancies at low rent and at a premium (fine, initial large sum)) of property that they can be sold (by the lessee, assigned); reducing any restriction to one whereby the landlord may apply standard that is "reasonable" vetting, without causing major delay. This is often known as the "statutory qualified covenant on assignment/alienation".

In the overall diminishing domain of social housing, exceptionally, lessees widely acquire over time the Right to Buy for a fixed discount on the market price of the home.

Commercial (business) leases and tenancies edit

In commercial property much of the law, especially as to disputes and basic responsibilities, is based on freedom of contract of the common law including the implied terms of precedent decisions of wide-ranging case law such as the meaning of "good and substantial repair". Implied principles include "non-derogation from grant" and "quiet enjoyment". All businesses which are tenants (lessees) must decide whether to contract in or outside of Part II of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 which gives them "business security of tenure". If not, it generally applies by default. This "security of tenure" is expressly subject to common reasons and associated mechanisms for a landlord to obtain back the premises. If a landlord is selling a block and a qualifying tenant occupies more than 50%, the tenant should be given the right of first refusal at the asking price to buy the block. As in most jurisdictions the law on rigorous adherence to lease terms on unlawful subletting and assignment can be strictly enforced, resulting in financial and premises loss if broken. Failure to repay a rent demand, unlike residential, can result in direct landlord's repossession ("peaceable re-entry") through a commercial landlord's right to the use of "self-help" evictions.[11] The taking of a tenant's goods without a court-issued warrant (flowing from a court order or outstanding tax demand) (distress) has been banned.[12]

Criticism of landlords edit

Land ownership edit

The concept of land ownership is not universal. Many Native American tribes did not view land as a commodity whereas many Europeans colonists did.[13] Ownership of land in the pre-colonial Americas varied from group to group, but many Native American societies had communal and individual land.[14]

Some European scholars were also skeptical of land ownership, such as Adam Smith and Henry George. Smith said about landlords, "As soon as the land of any country has all become private property, the landlords—like all other men—love to reap where they never sowed, and demand a rent even for their land’s natural product."[15] George believed land belonged to everyone and supported a public tax on economic rent, which he believed would be so profitable that all other taxes would be abolished.[16][17]

Monopolies edit

Another common criticism of landlords is the tendency for monopolization. Without regulation, corporations are able to use their purchasing power to buy up housing stock. In a single Atlanta zip code, up to 90% of the houses sold between January 2011 and June 2012 were purchased by instituitional investors.[18] Corporate landlords are able to buy foreclosed houses and rent the house back to the original owner.[19] Another form of corporate monopolization and housing are company towns, where one corporation owns the vast majority of housing and businesses. Since these corporations employ most of the residents of the town, they are able to raise rent and lower wages during a recession.[20][21]

Slum landlord edit

Renters (tenants or other licensees) at the lowest end of the payment scale may be in social or economic difficulty and suffer significant social stigma as a consequence. Due to lack of alternative options, such renters are often the victims of unscrupulous owners of unsafe and decrepit properties who neglect their responsibility to maintain the property.

The terms "slumlord", "slum landlord", or "ghetto landlord" is used to describe landlords of large numbers of such properties, often holding a virtual local monopoly. Public improvement or major private investment can improve such areas. In extreme situations, government compulsory purchase powers in many countries enable slum clearance to replace or renovate the worst of neighbourhoods.

One example is Peter Rachman, a landlord who operated in Notting Hill, London, in the 1950s and until his 1962 death. He became notorious for exploitation of his tenants, with the word "Rachmanism" entering the Oxford English Dictionary. His henchmen included Michael de Freitas (aka Michael X/Abdul Malik), who created a reputation as a black-power leader, and Johnny Edgecombe, who became a promoter of jazz and blues, which helped to keep him in the limelight.[22]

Accidental landlord edit

The term 'accidental landlord' is used for landlords who do not initially intend to become a landlord but have a spare property (from inheriting it, moving in with a partner, or unable to sell when moving), and then choose to lease the property instead of selling it.[23][24]

Rental investment and basis edit

Rental properties can be paid for by the tenant on whatever basis is agreed upon between the landlord and the tenant (more frequently than weekly or less than yearly is almost unheard of), which is always included in the lease agreement (preferably for both sides in writing). It should be one of the primary factors a tenant considers before moving in.[citation needed]

Incentives and disincentives edit

The incentive is to obtain a good rental yield (profit) and prospect of property price inflation. The disincentives are the locally varying rights of tenants and duties of landlords in repair/maintenance and administration — and keynote risks (tenant disputes, damage, neglect, loss of rent, insurance inavailability/disputes, economic slump, increased rate of interest on any mortgage, and negative equity or loss of investment). Net income (yield) and capital growth from letting (renting out) particularly in leveraged buy to let, is subject to idiosyncratic risk, which is considered objectively intensified for a highly leveraged investor limited to a small number of similar profile homes, of narrow rental market appeal in areas lacking economic resilience.[25]

Security for rent and extra fees edit

A landlord or their agent can decide to collect a security deposit (and/or in some jurisdictions such as parts of the US, a move-in/administration fee). A barrier if high and a relative attractive if low in many markets for a tenant, it is rarely debated in pre-tenancy term negotiations. In some jurisdictions either or both are banned in the original sense. Instead, a landlord's loss of rent/comprehensive damage insurance may be factored into the rent demanded and/or a special type of deposit, a regulated sum of money as a bond (protected security deposit) from the tenant held by a registered third party (such as certain realty agents) may be permissible. A deposit is normally by law to be offset against arrears (rent deficits) and damage by or failures to clean/repair by the tenant.

Licensed victualler edit

In the United Kingdom the owner and/or manager of a pub (public house) is usually called the "landlord/landlady" or "publican", the latter properly the appellation of a Roman public contractor or tax farmer. In more formal situations, the term used is licensed victualler or simply "licensee".[26]

The Licensed Trade Charity, formed in 2004 from the merger of the Society of Licensed Victuallers and Licensed Victualler's National Homes,[27] exists to serve the retirement needs of Britain's pub landlords. The charity also runs three private schools in Ascot and Reading in Berkshire and Sayers Common in Sussex. As well as having normal full fee paying students, Licensed Victuallers' School in Ascot provides discounted education prices for the children of landlords and others in the catering industry.

Landlord associations edit

There are significant associations of landlords in various countries. These associations/societies provide support for their members in facing a range of issues [28] by providing a means of mutual support, and also lobby relevant authorities and parliament with regard to the details and implementation of residential and some commercial tenancy legislation.

Australia edit

Numerous landlord associations exist in Australia. These associations should be distinguished from the class of property owner associations representing the 'big end of town' — the owners of major buildings and very large residential housing complexes, such as the Property Council of Australia.[29]

  • Property Owners Association of Australia (POAA)[30]
  • Property Owners Association of Victoria (POAVIC)[28]
  • POAQ - Property Owners Association of Queensland[31]
  • Property Owners Association of NSW[32]
  • Property Owners Association of Western Australia[33]
  • Landlords Association of South Australia[34]

United Kingdom edit

National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA) has now formed from a merger of the two following organisations as of 31/3/2020:[35][better source needed]

  • Residential Landlords Association (RLA)
  • National Landlords Association (NLA)

See also edit

Related occupations edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dagher, Veronica (19 December 2022). "For Landlords, Rising Housing Costs Make It Harder to Earn Passive Income". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
  2. ^ "Feudalism". faculty.history.wisc.edu. from the original on 5 April 2017. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  3. ^ Friedman on Leases (Sixth Edition) by Andrew R. Berman, Chapter 37: Leases, Licenses, and Easements Compared—Parking Rights, Department Store Concessions, Lodgers, Etc.
  4. ^ "Using a License Agreement Instead of a Lease". LawJournalNewsletters.com.
  5. ^ Bolander, Donald O. (1990). The New Webster's Library of Practical Information: Family Legal Guide. Lexicon Publications. pp. 44–45. ISBN 0-7172-4500-4.
  6. ^ "SOURCE OF INCOME LAWS BY STATE, COUNTY AND CITY" (PDF).
  7. ^ "Phoenix passes ordinance to ban income source discrimination in housing". KJZZ. 2023-03-02. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  8. ^ "MSN". www.msn.com. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  9. ^ "Regulated Tenancies" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2018-04-13. Retrieved 2018-04-12.
  10. ^ LRA 2002, Sch.3
  11. ^ HM Land Registry (2020). "Practice guide 26: leases – determination". Gov.uk. sec. 8.
  12. ^ Bailiffs 2018-04-13 at the Wayback Machine Lorraine Conway and Jack Dent. House of Commons Library: Briefing Paper Number 04103, 9 June 2017
  13. ^ "Different Views of Land | Native New York". nmai.si.edu. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
  14. ^ Gershon, Livia (2019-03-04). "Yes, Americans Owned Land Before Columbus". JSTOR Daily. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
  15. ^ Smith, Adam (1776). An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. p. 19.
  16. ^ "Henry George summary | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
  17. ^ George, Henry (1879). Progress and Poverty. pp. 405–406.
  18. ^ Semuels, Alana (2019-02-13). "When Wall Street Is Your Landlord". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
  19. ^ Mari, Francesca (2020-03-04). "A $60 Billion Housing Grab by Wall Street". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
  20. ^ Magazine, Smithsonian; Hirsch, Michele Lent. "America's Company Towns, Then and Now". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
  21. ^ Nix, Elizabeth (23 August 2018). "5 Famous Company Towns". History.
  22. ^ "– historytalk.org" (PDF). www.historytalk.org. (PDF) from the original on 2016-10-03.
  23. ^ Callegari, Marco (2021-04-09). "Accidental landlords – don't get caught out by the income tax trap". PropertyWire. Retrieved 2023-02-14.
  24. ^ Childers, Annabelle (2022-11-03). "'Accidental Landlords,' the new phenomenon hitting the Colorado Springs housing market". KRDO. Retrieved 2023-02-14.
  25. ^ Tara Siegel Barnard (March 29, 2013). "Rental Investment May Seem Safer Than It Really Is". The New York Times. from the original on March 30, 2013. Retrieved March 30, 2013.
  26. ^ "Dictionary.com". from the original on 2009-03-03. Retrieved 2008-07-19.
  27. ^ "Society of Licensed Victuallers, registered charity no. 230011". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
  28. ^ a b Victoria, Property Owners Association of. "Property Owners Association Victoria". www.poavic.org. from the original on 11 May 2018. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  29. ^ "Home". from the original on 2016-05-03. Retrieved 2016-05-10.
  30. ^ "Home". www.poaa.asn.au. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  31. ^ "Property Owners Association of Queensland". www.poaa.asn.au. from the original on 12 March 2018. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  32. ^ "POA NSW Inc". from the original on 2016-08-16. Retrieved 2016-07-22.
  33. ^ "POAWA - Property Owners Association of WA". Property Owners Association of Westerns Australia. from the original on 15 March 2018. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  34. ^ "Landlords' Association (S.A.) Incorporated". www.landlords.org.au. from the original on 2016-09-29.
  35. ^ "National Residential Landlords Association | National Support For Landlords". www.nrla.org.uk. Retrieved 2020-04-11.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Landlords at Wikimedia Commons

landlord, other, uses, disambiguation, landlady, redirects, here, other, uses, landlady, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material,. For other uses see Landlord disambiguation Landlady redirects here For other uses see Landlady disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Landlord news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message A landlord is the owner of a house apartment condominium land or real estate which is rented or leased to an individual or business who is called a tenant also a lessee or renter When a juristic person is in this position the term landlord is used Other terms include lessor housing provider and owner The term landlady may be used for the female owners The manager of a pub in the United Kingdom strictly speaking a licensed victualler is referred to as the landlord landlady In political economy it refers to the owner of natural resources alone e g land not buildings from which an economic rent a form of passive income 1 is the income received Powerful landlord in chariot Eastern Han 25 220 CE Hebei China Contents 1 History 2 Owner and tenant responsibilities 2 1 United States 2 2 Canada 2 3 United Kingdom 2 3 1 Residential rental market tenancies 2 3 2 Residential leasehold 2 3 3 Commercial business leases and tenancies 3 Criticism of landlords 3 1 Land ownership 3 2 Monopolies 3 3 Slum landlord 4 Accidental landlord 5 Rental investment and basis 5 1 Incentives and disincentives 5 2 Security for rent and extra fees 6 Licensed victualler 7 Landlord associations 7 1 Australia 7 2 United Kingdom 8 See also 8 1 Related occupations 9 References 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp David Berry owned much of what is now known as his namesake town of Berry The concept of a landlord may be traced back to the feudal system of manoralism seignorialism where a landed estate is owned by a Lord of the Manor mesne lords usually members of the lower nobility which came to form the rank of knights in the high medieval period holding their fief via subinfeudation but in some cases the land may also be directly subject to a member of higher nobility as in the royal domain directly owned by a king or in the Holy Roman Empire imperial villages directly subject to the emperor The medieval system ultimately continues the system of villas and latifundia peasant worked broad farmsteads of the Roman Empire 2 In modern times landlord describes any individual or entity such as a government body or an institution who charges rent to a person living in a home they do not own Owner and tenant responsibilities editA rental agreement or lease is the contract defining such terms as the price paid penalties for late payments the length of the rental or lease and the amount of notice required before either the homeowner or tenant cancels the agreement In general responsibilities are given as follows the homeowner is responsible for making repairs and performing property maintenance and the tenant is responsible for keeping the property clean and safe Many owners hire a property management company to take care of all the details of renting their property out to a tenant This usually includes advertising the property and showing it to prospective tenants negotiating and preparing the written leases or license agreements 3 4 and then once rented collecting rent from the tenant and performing repairs as needed United States edit In the United States residential homeowner tenant disputes are primarily governed by state law not federal law regarding property and contracts State law and in some places city law or county law sets the requirements for eviction of a tenant Generally there are a limited number of reasons for which a landlord or landlady can evict his or her tenant before the expiration of the tenancy though at the end of the lease term the rental relationship can generally be terminated without giving any reason Some cities counties and states have laws establishing the maximum rent a landlord can charge known as rent control or rent regulation and related eviction There is also an implied warranty of habitability whereby a landlord must maintain safe decent and habitable housing meeting minimum safety requirements such as smoke detectors and a locking door The most common disputes result from either the landlord s failure to provide services or the tenant s failure to pay rent the former can also lead to the latter The withholding of rent is justifiable cause for eviction as often explained in the lease 5 City ordinances can also play a role in renting policy such as the rise in source of income anti discrimination ordinances 6 7 Tenants unions also affect housing policy when organized politically 8 Canada edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Canada residential homeowner tenant disputes are primarily governed by provincial law not federal law regarding property and contracts Provincial law sets the requirements for eviction of a tenant Generally there are a limited number of reasons for which a landlord can evict a tenant Some provinces have laws establishing the maximum rent a landlord can charge known as rent control or rent regulation and related eviction There is also an implied warranty of habitability whereby a landlord must maintain safe decent and habitable housing meeting minimum safety requirements United Kingdom edit See also English land law Leases and licences and Scots property law Residential rental market tenancies edit Private sector renting is largely governed by many of the Landlord and Tenant Acts in particular the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 which sets bare minimum standards in tenants rights against their landlords Another key statute is the Housing Act 2004 Rents can be freely increased at the end of a usual six month duration on proper notice given to the tenant A Possession Order under the most common type the assured shorthold tenancy AST is usually obtainable after eight weeks two months of unpaid rent and at the court s discretion after serving the tenant with a Section 8 notice under the Housing Act 1988 as amended for a lesser period for all assured tenancies and on other grounds which defer to the landlord s ownership of the property If the tenancy is an AST then any possession order will not take effect until six months has passed into the initial tenancy A tenancy of someone who has been in occupation since before 15 January 1989 usually if not a shorthold from the outset following their inception from 1980 onwards may be a regulated tenancy with many more rights especially under the Rent Act 1977 and Protection from Eviction Act 1977 introduced by the Third Wilson ministry 9 Each house in multiple occupation a unit the law does not regard it as a single household having more than three tenants is subject to enhanced regulations including the Housing Act 2004 A council issued licence to be a landlord of such a unit is always required in some local authorities in others limited to the larger statutory examples Residential leasehold edit Tenancies above a couple of years are normally called leases and tend to be lengthy if more than seven years a new leasehold estate must be registered 10 These are governed by few of the above rules and are in longer examples deliberately more akin to full ownership than tenancies in general They seldom require a sizeable ground rent The law has not regulated hefty break resale charges nor does it prevent the sale of leasehold houses in the 2010s certain of these proposals have been widely consulted upon and are being drafted Broadly legislation allows such lessees tenants to club together to gain the Right to Manage and the right to buy the landlord s interest to collectively enfranchise It allows them individually to extend their leases for a new smaller sum premium which if the tenants have enfranchised will not normally be demanded recommended every 15 35 years Notice requirements and forms tend to be strict In smaller examples the tenant depending on a simple mathematical division of the building may be able to enfranchise individually Statute of 1925 implies into nearly all leases tenancies at low rent and at a premium fine initial large sum of property that they can be sold by the lessee assigned reducing any restriction to one whereby the landlord may apply standard that is reasonable vetting without causing major delay This is often known as the statutory qualified covenant on assignment alienation In the overall diminishing domain of social housing exceptionally lessees widely acquire over time the Right to Buy for a fixed discount on the market price of the home Commercial business leases and tenancies edit In commercial property much of the law especially as to disputes and basic responsibilities is based on freedom of contract of the common law including the implied terms of precedent decisions of wide ranging case law such as the meaning of good and substantial repair Implied principles include non derogation from grant and quiet enjoyment All businesses which are tenants lessees must decide whether to contract in or outside of Part II of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 which gives them business security of tenure If not it generally applies by default This security of tenure is expressly subject to common reasons and associated mechanisms for a landlord to obtain back the premises If a landlord is selling a block and a qualifying tenant occupies more than 50 the tenant should be given the right of first refusal at the asking price to buy the block As in most jurisdictions the law on rigorous adherence to lease terms on unlawful subletting and assignment can be strictly enforced resulting in financial and premises loss if broken Failure to repay a rent demand unlike residential can result in direct landlord s repossession peaceable re entry through a commercial landlord s right to the use of self help evictions 11 The taking of a tenant s goods without a court issued warrant flowing from a court order or outstanding tax demand distress has been banned 12 Criticism of landlords editLand ownership edit The concept of land ownership is not universal Many Native American tribes did not view land as a commodity whereas many Europeans colonists did 13 Ownership of land in the pre colonial Americas varied from group to group but many Native American societies had communal and individual land 14 Some European scholars were also skeptical of land ownership such as Adam Smith and Henry George Smith said about landlords As soon as the land of any country has all become private property the landlords like all other men love to reap where they never sowed and demand a rent even for their land s natural product 15 George believed land belonged to everyone and supported a public tax on economic rent which he believed would be so profitable that all other taxes would be abolished 16 17 Monopolies edit Another common criticism of landlords is the tendency for monopolization Without regulation corporations are able to use their purchasing power to buy up housing stock In a single Atlanta zip code up to 90 of the houses sold between January 2011 and June 2012 were purchased by instituitional investors 18 Corporate landlords are able to buy foreclosed houses and rent the house back to the original owner 19 Another form of corporate monopolization and housing are company towns where one corporation owns the vast majority of housing and businesses Since these corporations employ most of the residents of the town they are able to raise rent and lower wages during a recession 20 21 Slum landlord edit See also Rentier capitalism Renters tenants or other licensees at the lowest end of the payment scale may be in social or economic difficulty and suffer significant social stigma as a consequence Due to lack of alternative options such renters are often the victims of unscrupulous owners of unsafe and decrepit properties who neglect their responsibility to maintain the property The terms slumlord slum landlord or ghetto landlord is used to describe landlords of large numbers of such properties often holding a virtual local monopoly Public improvement or major private investment can improve such areas In extreme situations government compulsory purchase powers in many countries enable slum clearance to replace or renovate the worst of neighbourhoods One example is Peter Rachman a landlord who operated in Notting Hill London in the 1950s and until his 1962 death He became notorious for exploitation of his tenants with the word Rachmanism entering the Oxford English Dictionary His henchmen included Michael de Freitas aka Michael X Abdul Malik who created a reputation as a black power leader and Johnny Edgecombe who became a promoter of jazz and blues which helped to keep him in the limelight 22 Accidental landlord editThe term accidental landlord is used for landlords who do not initially intend to become a landlord but have a spare property from inheriting it moving in with a partner or unable to sell when moving and then choose to lease the property instead of selling it 23 24 Rental investment and basis editRental properties can be paid for by the tenant on whatever basis is agreed upon between the landlord and the tenant more frequently than weekly or less than yearly is almost unheard of which is always included in the lease agreement preferably for both sides in writing It should be one of the primary factors a tenant considers before moving in citation needed Incentives and disincentives edit The incentive is to obtain a good rental yield profit and prospect of property price inflation The disincentives are the locally varying rights of tenants and duties of landlords in repair maintenance and administration and keynote risks tenant disputes damage neglect loss of rent insurance inavailability disputes economic slump increased rate of interest on any mortgage and negative equity or loss of investment Net income yield and capital growth from letting renting out particularly in leveraged buy to let is subject to idiosyncratic risk which is considered objectively intensified for a highly leveraged investor limited to a small number of similar profile homes of narrow rental market appeal in areas lacking economic resilience 25 Security for rent and extra fees edit See also Security deposit and Landlords insurance This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message A landlord or their agent can decide to collect a security deposit and or in some jurisdictions such as parts of the US a move in administration fee A barrier if high and a relative attractive if low in many markets for a tenant it is rarely debated in pre tenancy term negotiations In some jurisdictions either or both are banned in the original sense Instead a landlord s loss of rent comprehensive damage insurance may be factored into the rent demanded and or a special type of deposit a regulated sum of money as a bond protected security deposit from the tenant held by a registered third party such as certain realty agents may be permissible A deposit is normally by law to be offset against arrears rent deficits and damage by or failures to clean repair by the tenant Licensed victualler editMain article Pub In the United Kingdom the owner and or manager of a pub public house is usually called the landlord landlady or publican the latter properly the appellation of a Roman public contractor or tax farmer In more formal situations the term used is licensed victualler or simply licensee 26 The Licensed Trade Charity formed in 2004 from the merger of the Society of Licensed Victuallers and Licensed Victualler s National Homes 27 exists to serve the retirement needs of Britain s pub landlords The charity also runs three private schools in Ascot and Reading in Berkshire and Sayers Common in Sussex As well as having normal full fee paying students Licensed Victuallers School in Ascot provides discounted education prices for the children of landlords and others in the catering industry Landlord associations editThere are significant associations of landlords in various countries These associations societies provide support for their members in facing a range of issues 28 by providing a means of mutual support and also lobby relevant authorities and parliament with regard to the details and implementation of residential and some commercial tenancy legislation Australia edit Numerous landlord associations exist in Australia These associations should be distinguished from the class of property owner associations representing the big end of town the owners of major buildings and very large residential housing complexes such as the Property Council of Australia 29 Property Owners Association of Australia POAA 30 Property Owners Association of Victoria POAVIC 28 POAQ Property Owners Association of Queensland 31 Property Owners Association of NSW 32 Property Owners Association of Western Australia 33 Landlords Association of South Australia 34 United Kingdom edit National Residential Landlords Association NRLA has now formed from a merger of the two following organisations as of 31 3 2020 35 better source needed Residential Landlords Association RLA National Landlords Association NLA See also editTenement law Related occupations edit Building superintendent Landowner Property managerReferences edit Dagher Veronica 19 December 2022 For Landlords Rising Housing Costs Make It Harder to Earn Passive Income Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2023 03 13 Feudalism faculty history wisc edu Archived from the original on 5 April 2017 Retrieved 14 March 2018 Friedman on Leases Sixth Edition by Andrew R Berman Chapter 37 Leases Licenses and Easements Compared Parking Rights Department Store Concessions Lodgers Etc Using a License Agreement Instead of a Lease LawJournalNewsletters com Bolander Donald O 1990 The New Webster s Library of Practical Information Family Legal Guide Lexicon Publications pp 44 45 ISBN 0 7172 4500 4 SOURCE OF INCOME LAWS BY STATE COUNTY AND CITY PDF Phoenix passes ordinance to ban income source discrimination in housing KJZZ 2023 03 02 Retrieved 2023 07 04 MSN www msn com Retrieved 2023 07 04 Regulated Tenancies PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2018 04 13 Retrieved 2018 04 12 LRA 2002 Sch 3 HM Land Registry 2020 Practice guide 26 leases determination Gov uk sec 8 Bailiffs Archived 2018 04 13 at the Wayback Machine Lorraine Conway and Jack Dent House of Commons Library Briefing Paper Number 04103 9 June 2017 Different Views of Land Native New York nmai si edu Retrieved 2023 03 13 Gershon Livia 2019 03 04 Yes Americans Owned Land Before Columbus JSTOR Daily Retrieved 2023 03 13 Smith Adam 1776 An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations p 19 Henry George summary Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2023 03 13 George Henry 1879 Progress and Poverty pp 405 406 Semuels Alana 2019 02 13 When Wall Street Is Your Landlord The Atlantic Retrieved 2023 03 13 Mari Francesca 2020 03 04 A 60 Billion Housing Grab by Wall Street The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 03 13 Magazine Smithsonian Hirsch Michele Lent America s Company Towns Then and Now Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 2023 03 13 Nix Elizabeth 23 August 2018 5 Famous Company Towns History historytalk org PDF www historytalk org Archived PDF from the original on 2016 10 03 Callegari Marco 2021 04 09 Accidental landlords don t get caught out by the income tax trap PropertyWire Retrieved 2023 02 14 Childers Annabelle 2022 11 03 Accidental Landlords the new phenomenon hitting the Colorado Springs housing market KRDO Retrieved 2023 02 14 Tara Siegel Barnard March 29 2013 Rental Investment May Seem Safer Than It Really Is The New York Times Archived from the original on March 30 2013 Retrieved March 30 2013 Dictionary com Archived from the original on 2009 03 03 Retrieved 2008 07 19 Society of Licensed Victuallers registered charity no 230011 Charity Commission for England and Wales a b Victoria Property Owners Association of Property Owners Association Victoria www poavic org Archived from the original on 11 May 2018 Retrieved 14 March 2018 Home Archived from the original on 2016 05 03 Retrieved 2016 05 10 Home www poaa asn au Retrieved 14 March 2018 Property Owners Association of Queensland www poaa asn au Archived from the original on 12 March 2018 Retrieved 14 March 2018 POA NSW Inc Archived from the original on 2016 08 16 Retrieved 2016 07 22 POAWA Property Owners Association of WA Property Owners Association of Westerns Australia Archived from the original on 15 March 2018 Retrieved 14 March 2018 Landlords Association S A Incorporated www landlords org au Archived from the original on 2016 09 29 National Residential Landlords Association National Support For Landlords www nrla org uk Retrieved 2020 04 11 External links edit nbsp Look up landlord in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Media related to Landlords at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Landlord amp oldid 1189401666 Licensed victualler, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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