• teft
    link
    115 days ago

    If you aren’t paying your rent, you’re going to end up in court. If you put that money in escrow the courts will see that you are operating in good faith while the landlord isn’t. They’re going to side with you. No need to get lawyers or accountants involved.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      415 days ago

      Is this different in Canada than in America?

      Is there some way to even set up a rent escrow account that is not a complex legal process where you have to petition a court and wade through a ton of legalese and paperwork to be able to legally set up a rent escrow account?

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        015 days ago

        Should be equally as easy anywhere.

        Escrow.com.

        Nothing special needed. Trivial to set up, and you control the release of funds. Doesn’t seem to have any ability to schedule deposits, but most rent payments are done manually anyhow. And since the money is clearly being held in reserve for the landlord, there is clear evidence of intent to pay.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          5
          edit-2
          15 days ago

          This website requires that the ‘buyer’ and ‘seller’ agree to mediate their one time financial transaction arrangement via this website.

          It isn’t a savings account with some kind of legally notarized purpose that a court will give a damn about. At least in the US, and only in some states is there even a legally valid option to petition the court to supercede the rental agreement with a court controlled rental escrow program.

          This site is for buying and selling domain names and cars and jewelry between two parties that are on good terms, but just want a bit of extra security.

          This website does not make sense in a situation where a contract already exists and one party to it feels the other is in violation of it.

          Do you think the landlord is going to willingly agree to this, in this situation? Why would they? They’d arguably be legally incriminating themselves, if not nullifying their own original rental contract.

          When the renter has already determined the landlord is acting in bad faith and likely violating laws, why would they trust the landlord in another contract?

          While the landlord is still demanding rent whilst (falsely) claiming they have not done anything that constitutes a breach of the rental agreement, why would they ameliorate their existing contract or means of payment?