Locked in; should I Sue Landlord?

By RCSSFlats

The lock/door handle on my apartment door failed recently, which left me locked in my apartment for six hours. I called the landlord’s office, which helped get me in touch with maintenance. The issue was resolved the next morning. The biggest issue for me is the maintenance worker told me this has happened several times before. I consider it irresponsible to not make changes to the doors after the problem reoccurs. How should I go about dealing with this issue?

Edited on: Saturday, January 5th, 2013 2:31 am

One Response to “Locked in; should I Sue Landlord?”

My response: (We welcome stories, examples, explanations, answers and a touch of your personality)
 

Mary Gustin

January 25th, 2010 9:03 am

Wow RCSSFlats! :0 You mean your landlord or apartment manager was already aware of the malfunctioning door? That poses a lot of what if concerns:
What if there was a fire?!
What if you had a work Emergency and needed to leave?
What if you had a health emergency and needed to go to the hospital?
What if you ran out of toilet paper!? :)

There’s a million reasons why this could be a major concern. Have you ever been to a retail location that has the following sign on their doors: “The door to remained unlocked during business hours” The reason is simple, its a major health and safety risk to lock people in buildings.

You are right that management should change out the lock to ensure that it doesn’t happen again. It was irresponsible for them to NOT have done it already. Since you weren’t actually harmed, I really doubt there is much you can do legally. So filing a lawsuit against your landlord probably won’t do you a lot of good. (plus you would need real proof that they were aware of the problem and neglectfully didn’t fix it– I doubt, especially in this economy, that you will be able to get the maintenance worker to make a signed statement… very unlikely. Verbal speech won’t do much good)

To show your landlord or apartment manager that you take this kind of thing serious and that you won’t stand for such irresponsible actions, you could always file an official landlord complaint. I’m sure that will get them to immediately fix the problem– it would if a tenant filed a complaint against one of my rentals. (I know, I had one or two) Here’s the link: http://www.rentalprotectionagency.com/complaint_center.php

You could also just beg them to fix it and repair it. Its up to you, but if you think legal action is and should be considered, do the complaint thing.

Mary Gustin
Property Manager


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