This is probably where I need to say, do what the landlord says, not what he does!
I have to confess, I’m breaking my own rules. Now I guess in the big picture that’s not a huge issue, but when it comes to a tenant owing me a ton of money and me suddenly finding myself sucked into the Eviction Spiral, it gets a bit serious.
After all, I’m supposed to be the expert, yet I’m making the same mistake I tell you not too and I guess I better tell the entire tale. So let me take you down the garden path….
This actually dates all the way back to December with one of my weekly rental tenants. He’s a very clean neat individual, but a) he doesn’t speak very much english and b) he owes me money.
As we zip back a few months to the beginning of December as typically happens to many of my rooming house tenants they vacate around mid month and head back to where their families are located. It’s typical as many of the construction projects close down early before Christmas and many of the workers get to enjoy a two or three week break and trades folks are who I cater too.
So this is something I tend to see every year, then in January they start coming back, rooms fill up and it’s business as usual. Now my nice clean non-english speaking fellow named Michel had no one to go home to. No family around, nothing, so he intended to stay at my property over the break. the only issue being, he had no income coming in to pay for the room. (This is where the hypocrite part comes into play!)
As I weigh my options I have a few things to consider a) he’s a good guy, b) he’s been good about paying in his past history and c) I have a bunch of vacancies anyway and if I kick him out or he leaves I still won’t be collecting rent for that room and I don’t know what the next guy will be like and how many weeks before there could be a next guy.
So I did the easy thing, I let him stay.
Fast Forward to January
I just happen to live in an oil based economy region so as January rolls around many of the projects have moved to a hold status due to the uncertainty of oil prices and the viability of some of these projects going forward if oil stays low.
Instead of starting work at the beginning of January, it turns into mid January, then late January and finally the beginning of February before he finally lands a job. the good news is, he gets paid a lot per hour, so it own’t take too long to get caught up. (Now I don’t want you to read anything into this, but I’m talking about getting caught up in February and here it is March when I’m writing this…)
Anyway, according to my rules, I should have cut bait and recast already. instead I go with my gut and give him more time. This is the part where YOU need to do what I say and not what I’m currently doing with this guy.
Now Fast Forward to Late February
Now we’re in the last week of February and I get a text update from him (he uses French to English conversion to send me texts, sometimes it is very very confusing). This set of texts though is quite clear. He will have $2,000 for me on Saturday the 28th (yes, I let a weekly tenant rack up an outstanding balance of over $2,000, please find me a wall to bang my head on).
As you can imagine I’m pretty upbeat when I go to meet him Saturday, at least at first.
You see, he lost his bank card and couldn’t withdraw the money.
Is it time to panic yet?
Of course he can’t tell me this due to the lack of conversational English between us, but he has notes that someone obviously wrote out for him in English. So now I’m stuck in a tight spot. It’s the Eviction Spiral I referred to originally.
If I kick him out, I take a huge loss, so I have to take a stand.
His notes tell me he will go to the bank after work Monday get the cash and get a new card and will have the money for me Tuesday night. Experience tells me this is the perfect getaway for him.
If he has $2,000 that is enough for him to get into a new rental place, with the 1st being the next day, it’s an optimum time for him to skip out.
But I follow the hypocritical emotional road and lay down the line, Either I get paid Tuesday or he GETS OUT!!
Even in our lack of a mutual language I am quite sure I got my point across, now I play the waiting game.
My question for you, what would you have done? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below and I’ll add an update Wednesday about what happened!
Update Friday
Just to make this worse, I’ve extended to tomorrow. The tenant paid $200 to buy a few more days, but tomorrow is the cutoff. I meant to update Wednesday, but it’s been one of those weeks that will likely be extending out for the entire month!
Poof, It’s Magic!
Yes, I’ve had another tenant disappear…
I was at the property Monday to get some work and cleaning done there (I rented a steam cleaner for the day, so I was bouncing from property to property to get the most bang for my rental dollar) and my tenant’s room was wide open, all his items were gone, the room was quite clean, his keys were on the dresser and he was gone.
Bottom line, I’m out a bunch of money, my faith in humanity is eaten away a bit more and in the end I can still sleep at night. I tried to help, deep down I knew it probably wasn’t going to work out for me, but as part of my nature I really do want to help people (hence this site!), just along the way I may have to take a little damage.
The hypocritical lesson to pass along is if things are really tight, you can’t take this chance. You need to clamp down immediately. I could probably rationalize some of the loss as I would have had a vacant room for multiple weeks anyway, but it’s still a loss. If you have more losses than wins, you eventually lose and in Real Estate, you lose big when you lose.