What’s The Best App To Safely...
Technology2 mins ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.does the landlord realise the items are ruined? if he knew, i doubt he'd want to keep them anyway - what would be the point - he cant re-use a broken bed and wrecked furniture!
i would suggest wrecking them a bit more and then show him a photo - once he sees its now junk he will probably give you permission to bin it.
if he comes to see for himself make sure the mattress stinks and the furniture looks rotten - cover it in a thin layer of flour to look like mould and loosen the legs
funnywebsite: I agree, and that's much the stance I'm taking, e.g. I don't want them, does he want them? If so, they're waiting for him to pick up, if not I'm prepared to dispose of them for him. Them staying here is not an option.
In A Pickle: There's an inventory mentioned in the contract, but if it exists, I've never seen it!
stanleyman: I'm reserving the big guns for after taking the reasonable approach. I don't want to go in too heavy this close to my contract renewal and risk a "coincidental" hike in rent.
joko: The sabotage method is amusing, but impractical. I've never seen or spoken to my landlord; everything goes through the letting agent. The bed is now dismantled but in the way, the tables might even look quite trendy in a flat nothing like mine.
I'm speaking to the letting agent tomorrow, and wanted some 2nd, 3rd, and 4th opinions as a sanity check. Thanks everyone!
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