Some of you may be following the story but here is the general recap, Landlord got a court summons before Christmas as he hadn't payed the mortgage since last April (before we moved in). In the end he and the morthgage company agreed a payment structure where he paid the arrears and fees for six months as an additional payment and any remaining could be added to the mortgage if payments had been kept up to date. He wrote to us (the first communication from him on the issue) to say everything was sorted and not to worry, zip forward to last week when we got a letter saying the mortgage company were going to take possesion of the property.
Here's the fun part. The landlord sent us a letter on friday saying that he was issuing a section 21 notice and we needed to leave the property....However, it seems he is full of knowledge on section 21 apart from the following points.
1. He can't issue a section 21 notice which terminates the tenancy before the end of the agreed contract period, which he is trying to do. If he wants us out he needs to use a section 8 notice but that can only be done if there is a breach of the contract by us, which of course there isn't.
2. He didn't protect our deposit in a Tenancy deposit scheme, or more specifically he didn't inform us he had done, ever, let alone within 14 days from the start of the tenancy as he was required by law to do. Not protecting the deposit means he is then not allowed to issue a section 21 notice.
3. He has already issued a section 21 notice when we took the tenancy which informed us he wanted the property back at the end of the year.*
It seems the poor chap is in terrible financial trouble, so much so his nice house is on the market and he also wants to sell the property we are in. As it happens we are keen to get out of the property ASAP however as a matter of principle we won't be taking any notice of his little section 21 notice as it's not worth the paper it's printed on. We of course will be moving out in the next few weeks, but he won't be getting the property back from us until the end of the agreed tenancy in July by which time it will have been repossesed and his £20k investment will have gone down the drain....
... still you can't lose with property as it only ever goes up, right?
* Needless to say the issue is now in the hands of our legal representatives.
