The landlord of a Toronto condo is being forced to pay at least $8,500 to cover the costs of his “nuisance-causing” tenant, a recent tribunal hearing found.
On Feb. 10, the Condominium Authority Tribunal found both the owner and the tenant of the Yonge Street and St. Clair Avenue condo equally responsible for the tenant’s “annoying” behavior.
The “annoying and disruptive conduct” included the tenant leaving food containers in the hallway for long periods of time, causing “foul smells and tripping hazards,” and “excessive noise,” the decision said. Meanwhile, the tenant and his lawyer argued the condo board was using the tribunal to “force” him out of the building, suggesting the case is motivated by a staff member’s “personal vendetta” following an “initial altercation.”
Consequently, Clifton said his “lack of reasonable efforts” to address his tenant’s conduct placed the burden onto the condo corporation to take matters into their own hands – including the costs of this case – which is why the vice-chair thought it would be appropriate to award the condo owner a “substantial portion of those costs.”
The tenant had previously expressed intentions of moving out of the unit “at some point in the near future,” and Clifton wrote in his decision that “it will likely be better for all parties that he does.”
Philippines Latest News, Philippines Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Toronto Public Library features collection of previously censored, banned books - Toronto | Globalnews.caThe Toronto Public Library is spotlighting 50 books that have previously been censored, removed or challenged as part of the growing Book Sanctuary movement.
Read more »
Bitcoin [BTC] and S&P 500 part ways, where now for the king coin?Bitcoin decoupled from S&P 500 for the first time after the FTX debacle. Sentiment for Bitcoin improved, but traders took short positions. Bitcoin [BTC] had been leading the charge of the bullish sentiment surrounding crypto over the past few days. Due to its positive rally over the past few weeks, its correlation with the S&P […]
Read more »
These are the only two Toronto neighbourhoods with average home prices below $1MAs average Toronto home prices remain firmly above the $1,000,000 mark, a few bastions of relative affordability remain within the second-most expe...
Read more »
No plans to hold Toronto mayoral byelection before June: McKelvieToronto’s deputy mayor says she has no plans to call an early meeting of city council to fast\u002Dtrack the path to a mayoral byelection to replace John Tory.
Read more »