House Bill No. 406
Introduced By bankhead
A Bill for an Act entitled: An Act revising landlord and tenant laws; revising landlords' rights and duties; decreasing the time period for a tenant to remove abandoned property after notice from the landlord; allowing a landlord to cover labor costs; and amending sections 70-24-103, 70-24-303, 70-24-430, 70-24-436, and 70-25-201, MCA.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Montana:
Section
Section 70-24-103, MCA, is amended to read:
"70-24-103. General definitions. Subject to additional definitions contained in subsequent sections and unless the context otherwise requires, in this chapter the following definitions apply:
(1) "Action" includes recoupment, counterclaim, setoff suit in equity, and any other proceeding in which rights are determined, including an action for possession.
(2) "Case of emergency" means an extraordinary occurrence beyond the tenant's control requiring immediate action to protect the premises or the tenant. A case of emergency may include the interruption of essential services, including heat, electricity, gas, running water, hot water, and sewer and septic system service, or life-threatening events in which the tenant or landlord has reasonable apprehension of immediate danger to the tenant or others.
(3) "Court" means the appropriate district court, justice's court, or city court.
(4) "Dwelling unit" means a structure or the part of a structure that is used as a home, residence, or sleeping place by a person who maintains a household or by two or more persons who maintain a common household. Dwelling unit, in the case of a person who rents space in a mobile home park but does not rent the mobile home, means the space rented and not the mobile home itself.
(5) "Good faith" means honesty in fact in the conduct of the transaction concerned.
(6) "Landlord" means:
(a) the owner, lessor, or sublessor of:
(i) the dwelling unit or the building of which it is a part; or
(ii) a mobile home park; or
(b) a manager of the premises who fails to disclose the managerial position.
(7) "Mobile home owner" means the owner of a manufactured mobile home dwelling unit entitled under a rental agreement to occupy a mobile home park space in a mobile home park.
(8) "Mobile home park" means a trailer court as defined in 50-52-101.
(9) "Organization" includes a corporation, government, governmental subdivision or agency, business trust, estate, trust, or partnership or association, two or more persons having a joint or common interest, and any other legal or commercial entity.
(10) "Owner" means one or more persons, jointly or severally, in whom is vested all or part of:
(a) the legal title to property; or
(b) the beneficial ownership and a right to present use and enjoyment of the premises, including a mortgagee in possession.
(11) "Person" includes an individual or organization.
(12) "Premises" means a dwelling unit and the structure of which it is a part, the facilities and appurtenances in the structure, and the grounds, areas, and facilities held out for the use of tenants generally or promised for the use of a tenant.
(13) "Rent" means all payments to be made to the landlord under the rental agreement.
(14) "Rental agreement" means all agreements, written or oral, and valid rules adopted under 70-24-311 embodying the terms and conditions concerning the use and occupancy of a dwelling unit and premises.
(15) "Roomer" means a person occupying a dwelling unit that does not include a toilet, a bathtub or a shower, a refrigerator, a stove, or a kitchen sink, all of which are provided by the landlord and one or more of which are used in common by occupants in the structure.
(16) "Single-family residence" means a structure maintained and used as a single dwelling unit. Notwithstanding that a dwelling unit shares one or more walls with another dwelling unit, it is a single-family residence if it has direct access to a street or thoroughfare and shares neither heating facilities, hot water equipment, nor any other essential facility or service with another dwelling unit.
(17) "Tenant" means a person entitled under a rental agreement to occupy a dwelling unit to the exclusion of others."
Section
Section 70-24-303, MCA, is amended to read:
"70-24-303. Landlord to maintain premises -- agreement that tenant perform duties -- limitation of landlord's liability for failure of smoke detector. (1) A landlord shall:
(a) comply with the requirements of applicable building and housing codes materially affecting health and safety in effect at the time of original construction in all dwelling units where construction is completed after July 1, 1977;
(b) make repairs and do whatever is necessary to put and keep the premises in a fit and habitable condition;
(c) keep all common areas of the premises in a clean and safe condition;
(d) maintain in good and safe working order and condition all electrical, plumbing, sanitary, heating, ventilating,
air-conditioning, and other facilities and appliances, including elevators, supplied or required to be supplied by him the
landlord;
(e) provide and maintain appropriate receptacles and conveniences for the removal of ashes, garbage, rubbish, and other
waste incidental to the occupancy of the dwelling unit and arrange for their removal;
(e) unless otherwise provided in a rental agreement, provide and maintain appropriate receptacles and conveniences for the removal of ashes, garbage, rubbish, and other waste incidental to the occupancy of the dwelling unit and arrange for their removal;
(f)(f) supply running water and reasonable amounts of hot water at all times and reasonable heat between October 1 and
May 1, except if the building that includes the dwelling unit is not required by law to be equipped for that purpose or the
dwelling unit is so constructed that heat or hot water is generated by an installation within the exclusive control of the
tenant; and
(g)(g) install, in accordance with rules adopted by the department of justice, an approved smoke detector in each dwelling
unit under his the landlord's control. Upon commencement of a rental agreement, the landlord shall verify that the smoke
detector in the dwelling unit is in good working order. The tenant shall maintain the smoke detector in good working order
during the tenant's rental period. For purposes of this subsection, an approved smoke detector is a device that is capable of
detecting visible or invisible particles of combustion and that bears a label or other identification issued by an approved
testing agency having a service for inspection of materials and workmanship at the factory during fabrication and assembly.
(2) If the duty imposed by subsection (1)(a) of this section is greater than a duty imposed by subsections (1)(b) through
(1)(g) (1)(g), a landlord's duty shall must be determined by reference to subsection (1)(a).
(3) A landlord and tenant of a one-, two-, or three-family residence may agree in writing that the tenant perform the
landlord's duties specified in subsections subsections (1)(e) and (1)(f) of this section and (1)(f) of this section and specified
repairs, maintenance tasks, alteration, and remodeling but only if the transaction is entered into in good faith and not for the
purpose of evading the obligations of the landlord.
(4) A landlord and tenant of a one-, two-, or three-family residence may agree that the tenant is to perform specified repairs, maintenance tasks, alterations, or remodeling only if:
(a) the agreement of the parties is entered into in good faith and not for the purpose of evading the obligations of the landlord and is set forth in a separate writing signed by the parties and supported by adequate consideration;
(b) the work is not necessary to cure noncompliance with subsection (1)(a) of this section; and
(c) the agreement does not diminish the obligation of the landlord to other tenants in the premises.
(5) The landlord is not liable for damages caused as a result of the failure of the smoke detector required under subsection
(1)(g) (1)(g)."
Section
Section 70-24-430, MCA, is amended to read:
"70-24-430. Disposition of personal property abandoned by tenant after termination. (1) If a tenancy terminates in
any manner except by court order and the landlord reasonably believes that the tenant has abandoned all personal property
which that the tenant has left on the premises, and a period of time of at least 5 days has elapsed since the occurrence of
events upon which the landlord formed that belief, the landlord may remove the property from the premises.
(2) The landlord shall inventory and store all goods, chattels, and personal property of the tenant in a place of safekeeping and shall exercise reasonable care for the property. The landlord may charge a reasonable storage and labor charge if the property is stored by the landlord, plus the cost of removal of the property to the place of storage. The landlord may store the property in a commercial storage company, in which case the storage cost includes the actual storage charge plus the cost of removal of the property to the place of storage.
(3) After complying with subsections (1) and (2), the landlord shall:
(a) make a reasonable attempt to notify the tenant in writing that the property must be removed from the place of safekeeping;
(b) notify the local law enforcement office of the property held by the landlord;
(c) make a reasonable effort to determine if the property is secured or otherwise encumbered; and
(d) send a notice by certified mail to the last-known address of the tenant, stating that at a specified time, not less than 15 days after mailing the notice, the property will be disposed of if not removed.
(4) The landlord may dispose of the property after complying with subsection (3) by:
(a) selling all or part of the property at a public or private sale; or
(b) destroying or otherwise disposing of all or part of the property if he the landlord reasonably believes that the value of
the property is so low that the cost of storage or sale exceeds the reasonable value thereof of the property.
(5) If the tenant, upon receipt of the notice provided in subsection (3), responds in writing to the landlord on or before the
day specified in the notice that he the tenant intends to remove his the property and does not do so within 15 7 days after
delivery of the tenant's response, the tenant's property shall be is conclusively presumed to be abandoned. If the tenant
removes the property, the landlord is entitled to storage costs for the period that the property remains in safekeeping, plus
the cost of removal of the property to the place of storage. Reasonable storage costs are allowed a landlord who stores the
property himself, and actual storage costs are allowed a landlord who stores the property in a commercial storage company.
A landlord is entitled to payment of the storage costs allowed under this subsection before the tenant may remove the
property.
(6) The landlord is not responsible for any loss to the tenant resulting from storage unless the loss is caused by the
landlord's purposeful or negligent act. On the event of purposeful violation, the landlord is liable for double actual
damages.
(7) A public or private sale authorized by this section shall must be conducted under the provisions of 30-9-504(3) or the
sheriff's sale provisions of Title 25, chapter 13, part 7.
(8) The landlord may deduct from the proceeds of the sale the reasonable costs of notice, storage, labor, and sale and any
delinquent rent or damages owing on the premises and must shall remit to the tenant the remaining proceeds, if any,
together with an itemized accounting. If the tenant cannot after due diligence be found, the remaining proceeds shall must
be deposited with the county treasurer of the county in which the sale occurred and, if not claimed within 3 years, shall
must revert to the general fund of the county available for general purposes."
Section
Section 70-24-436, MCA, is amended to read:
"70-24-436. Mobile home parks -- grounds for termination of rental agreement. (1) A landlord of a mobile home park may terminate a rental agreement only by following the procedure set forth in 70-24-422, except as specifically provided in this section, and only for one or more of the following reasons:
(a) nonpayment of rent, late charges, or common area maintenance fees as established in the rental agreement;
(b) late payment of rent, late charges, or common area maintenance fees as established in the rental agreement three or more times within a 12-month period if written notice is given by the landlord after each failure to pay, as required by 70-24-422. For this subsection (1)(b), the notice period referred to in 70-24-422(1) is 30 days.
(c) violation of a mobile home park rule that creates an immediate threat to the health and safety of any resident of the mobile home park if the violation has not been remedied 24 hours after the violator is given written notice of the violation;
(d) two or more violations within a 12-month period of any combination of one or more mobile home park rules, the
violation of which would have a significant adverse impact on the mobile home park or its residents and which that are so
designated;
(e) two or more violations within a 12-month period of the same rule. For this subsection (1)(e), the notice period referred
to in 70-24-422(1) is 60 30 days.
(f) two or more violations of 70-24-321(1) within a 12-month period or any violation of 70-24-321(2);
(g) disorderly conduct that results in disruption of the rights of others to the peaceful enjoyment and use of the premises. For this subsection (1)(g), the notice period referred to in 70-24-422(1) is 30 days.
(h) endangers other residents or mobile home park personnel, or causes substantial damage to the mobile home park
premises;
(i) conviction of the mobile home owner or a tenant of the mobile home owner of a violation of a federal or state law or local ordinance, when the violation is detrimental to the health, safety, or welfare of other residents or the landlord of the mobile home park, or the landlord's documentation of a violation of the provisions of Title 45, chapter 9;
(j) changes in the use of the land if the requirements of subsection (2) are met. For this subsection (1)(j), the notice period referred to in 70-24-422(1) is 180 days.
(k) a legitimate business reason, provided that the landlord meets the following requirements:
(i) the termination does not violate a provision of this section or any other state statute; and
(ii) the landlord has given the mobile home owner or tenant of the mobile home owner a minimum of 90 days' written notice of the termination.
(2) If a landlord plans to change the use of all or part of the land composing the mobile home park from mobile home lot rentals to some other use, each affected mobile home owner must receive notice from the landlord as follows:
(a) The landlord shall give the mobile home owner and a tenant of the mobile home owner at least 15 days' written notice that the landlord will be appearing before a unit of local government to request permits for a change of use of the mobile home park.
(b) After all required permits requesting a change of use have been approved by the unit of local government, the landlord shall give the mobile home owner and a tenant of the mobile home owner 6 months' written notice of termination of tenancy. If the change of use does not require local government permits, the landlord shall give the written notice at least 6 months prior to the change of use. In the notice, the landlord shall disclose and describe in detail the nature of the change of use.
(c) Prior to entering a rental agreement during the 6-month notice period referred to in subsection (2)(b), the landlord shall give each prospective mobile home owner and tenant of the mobile home owner written notice that the landlord is requesting a change in use before a unit of local government or that a change in use has been approved.
(3) For purposes of calculating the total number of notices given within a 12-month period under subsection (1)(b), only
one notice per for each violation per month may be included in the calculation."
Section
Section 70-25-201, MCA, is amended to read:
"70-25-201. Security deposit -- deductions authorized therefrom. (1) A landlord renting property covered by this chapter may deduct from the security deposit a sum equal to the damage alleged to have been caused by the tenant, together with a sum equal to the unpaid rent, late charges, utilities, penalties due under lease provisions, and other money owing to the landlord at the time of deduction, including rent owed under 70-24-441(3), and a sum for actual cleaning expenses, including a reasonable charge for the landlord's labor.
(2) At the request of either party, the premises may be inspected within 1 week prior to termination of the tenancy.
(3) Cleaning charges may not be imposed for normal maintenance performed on a cyclical basis by the landlord as noted by the landlord at the time that the tenant occupies the space unless the landlord is forced to perform this maintenance because of negligence of the tenant. Additionally, cleaning charges may not be deducted until written notice has been given to the tenant. The notice must include the cleaning not accomplished by the tenant and the additional and type or types of cleaning that need to be done by the tenant to bring the premises back to its condition at the time of its renting. After the delivery of the notice, the tenant has 24 hours to complete the required cleaning. If notice is mailed by certified mail, service of the notice is considered to have been made 3 days after the date of the mailing. A tenant who fails to notify the landlord of the intent to vacate or who vacates the premises without notice relieves the landlord of the requirement of giving notice and allows the landlord to deduct the cleaning charges from the deposit.
(4) A person may not deduct or withhold from the security deposit any amount for purposes other than those set forth in this section."
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