One Excellent Reason Why a Landlord Should Not Engage in Self Help.
Posted By Cliff Tuttle | September 20, 2016
No. 1,284
I answered a question on AVVO yesterday asked by a landlord who was planning to engage in self-help, that is, locking out a tenant without filing suit under the Landlord and Tenant Act.
Of course, if you lock the tenant out, you lock his property in. Since you have to do something with the current tenant’s property in order to prepare for the next tenant, it is likely that the landlord will either move it to storage or discard it.
Before the 2012 amendment to the Landlord and Tenant Act, codified at 68 P.S. § 250.504, the tenant did not have a practical remedy to this practice. However, under the amendment, the landlord must give a notice that the tenant has 10 days to remove the personal property in the unit and may request that the property be held (either on or off the premises) for 30 days. Failure to comply entitles the tenant to sue for treble damages and attorneys fees.
Landlords who short circuited the judicial process in the past had a fair chance of getting away with it. But not anymore.
To see a copy of the form of the required notice, scroll down to Post No. 1,279.