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Earlier this year my social housing landlord sold my property to another housing association. At the time of the transfer of tenancy there were relatively smalll rent arrears on my account c. £200. While I realise that should I not pay all these arrears to the new landlord I could be sued, as rent payments have been made on time since xfer, could I be liable to eviction on the basis of any outstanding inherited arrears alone?
No best answer has yet been selected by shortpaul. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.it depends on whether the debt has been transferred. Your landlord should be sending you a rent account in the standard form. The figure at the top will show if arrears are carried over.
if you ask THEM the clerk will chuckle and say yes of course we owe us loo-lah
BUT when I bought a house with ground rent, the ground rent co demanded 6 y arrears and the bill was 7 ! oh oops said the clerk. oops said I
With social housing( this includes housing associations) you may have a tenant support officer. Get them to check on your behalf. If your rent was paid in full of in part by housing benefit the arrears might have happened by payment dates not synching with rent due dates. If this is the case they will be used to it, but checking covers your back if a problem arises later.
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