by Gogarty » Sat May 17, 2014 6:06 pm
If you moved out on 8/31, doesn't matter that walk-through/key return occurred later (though you were free to decline to engage in either, and mail or drop off your keys on move-out).
"... the landlord along with 2 other people was already at the premises."So?"They had entered the house even though the renters was not present or had handed over the keys? "Not sure what your point is here. The landlord would be free to do this.
"Can we cite that they acted in bad faith and did not return our deposit in 30 days after the lease expired."You can't successfully argue "bad faith" simply because a letter was mailed out a few days late. It's not material, though you're free to point that out among the list of arguments if this ever gets to court. What I'd do is argue that I didn't leave any "damages"; if the landlord offers pictures of a horribly damaged place, I'd argue (i) those weren't taken after my tenancy, or (ii) that I can only imagine a break-in occurred (does it look like "vandalism"?) and as such would expect to see a police report about that because I know I didn't leave the place like that on 8/31. Hopefully, you have pictures of the place as you left it, or the landlord won't offer any credible evidence that you did this damage (such as video/credible, authentic pictures of the place before you moved in. If you argue you left the place in X condition (whether you have pictures or not) and the landlord argues Y, the court should by default press the landlord for details that makes it seem more likely than not that the landlord is telling the truth if the court intends to award the landlord damages." Do we have any chances in the small claims court?"If you're talking about suing for your deposit, no reasonable stranger could claim that you don't.Before I sued, I'd send the landlord a letter disputing that you left the place with any damages (or disputing the cost of repairing any damage). I'd send certified mail and show on the letter that a copy went regular mail or hand delivery or however. You aren't obligated to send it to the lawyer, but you may as well.