• SSTFOP
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    161 year ago

    Can an apartment building owner give permission for a vampire to enter an apartment even if the tenant is refusing? If so, does the owner need to be on-site, or can permission be given over the phone?

    If an apartment owner can give permission, can a bank that forecloses on a home give permission for a vampire to enter, even at resistance of the people actually living in the home? Do the people need to be aware their home has been foreclosed on, or can it say, be done as a legal fiction in the dead of night by a vampire corrupted bank to allow entry?

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      161 year ago

      I think the apartment owner can give permission, but only if they’ve given proper notice to the tenant. Most states I believe require 24-48 hours prior notice, except in the case of an emergency. I’m not sure what would constitute a legally valid vampire-emergency, but as long as the landlord properly notifies the tenant in advance I believe they could.

      • @EsotericEmbryo
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        31 year ago

        Yupp “water leak” is pretty much the magic words that throw all the hours notices out the window they can just come right in. My landlord always tells me if that happens but I think if its an emergency like that they might not even be obligated to tell you about entering until afterwards not sure on that though

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      51 year ago

      Most times I’ve seen it, permission can be given by any resident. Ownership doesn’t play a part at all. So I would guess a land lord can’t give permission.

      Also I recall one example of permission being required for entering an apartment, but not the building. Though in that case the vampire in question was living in annother apartment in the same building.

      • SSTFOP
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        21 year ago

        What about a sublet tenant in one room of a home? Can the home owner give permission for the vampire to enter that room, or is it a separate entity for purposes of needing permission?

      • SSTFOP
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        21 year ago

        What about somebody who is in the home but not a resident? For example a partygoer at a house party inviting a vampire in.

        • @emptyother
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          11 year ago

          A door mat can invite a vampire in, as seen in Renfield.

          • SSTFOP
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            21 year ago

            The doormat has no agency of its own, and is an expression of the owner, chosen and placed deliberately by the owner.

      • @EsotericEmbryo
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        11 year ago

        In my living situation there is a keycoded entry on the front of the apartment building. What about that? If I never gave the vampire my entry code am I just immune to vampires? My landlord gives maintenance workers the code, but in that case if one of them were vampires I wouldnt have been the one to invite them in, right? There’s definitely layers to this I have never considered before.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Do the people need to be aware their home has been foreclosed on, or can it say, be done as a legal fiction in the dead of night by a vampire corrupted bank to allow entry?

      There was a 2020 documentary that elucidates this to some degree, in the sense that Vampire rules are only as effective as both the people and the vampire in question believe in them. For example, the whole burning under the daylight sun trope is merely a state of mind/habit reinforced by generations of preyed upon cultures to the degree that the vampire believes it themselves.

      To this then, I say that both the vampire and the people need to be aware their home has been foreclosed on for any effect to occur.