The house I'm renting has a gas pack but it does not have a tank hooked up. I've contacted the gas company and setting up a new tank and putting gas in it runs over $400. I'm trying to figure if I am supposed to pay for set up for this stuff. There is currently a huge tank on the property that the gas company initially said they wouldn't fill but have came back and said they would. But it still needs a regulator and lines connecting it to the gas pack all of which cost money.Who is supposed to pay for this: the landlord or me? I've talked to my landlord and he said its "not his job to pay for my heat." I'm not asking the man to pay for the gas just questioning if I'm supposed to pay for the new lines or not.Any thoughts? I've searched and am waiting to hear back from the local CDC (community development center).
11/24/2009 4:54:37 PM
Gas pack ? How the hell do you know they got gas ?
11/24/2009 4:58:20 PM
UHHHH ... Ask him how you are supposed to heat the house. You sure its supposed to use this "gas pack" you speak of??Maybe he switched it off of gas a long time ago, and has electric heat now??If the AC goes out, would he expect you to fix the AC in order to use it? I dont think so.Just dont pay him any rent until he provides the means for you to heat your house .... and notify him that you will be doing so.
11/24/2009 5:07:58 PM
11/24/2009 5:10:51 PM
Its a gas pack. Around this area there aren't gas lines running through communities. People have tanks and get these tanks filled up every winter. The man lived in the house for years but moved to Wilmington about 3 years ago. He kept this place a vacation home but never visited so he decided to rent. He gave me the name and number to the gas company that owns the tank at the house BUT the company went out of business 2 years ago (just to show you how much my landlord knows).I'm trying to figure out who is legally required to pay for the new lines and regulator on the tank. It just doesn't feel right that I should have to pay to hook his house to the tank when the lines and regulator would remain after I move out.
11/24/2009 5:20:49 PM
In our properties, we maintain the equipment and the tenant is responsible for fuel. I have no idea about legal responsibilities though.
11/24/2009 5:22:56 PM
Simple solution is this - ask him to pay for it. If he says no, suck it up and pay for it yourself. Take the lines and regulator with you when you move before the lease has expired.
11/24/2009 5:23:09 PM
It's the landlord's duty.http://www.ncga.state.nc.us/enactedlegislation/statutes/html/bychapter/chapter_42.html42-42:
11/24/2009 5:23:42 PM
i helped out an ex-gf back in Boone getting out of a shitty situationshe paid $600 to fill up the tank of gas for winter and it was gone in ONE month because the landlord didn't properly seal the house to keep heat, they insisted they weren't responsible, we said the word lawyer and they settled and let her out of it a few days latergood luck
11/24/2009 5:45:44 PM
11/24/2009 6:55:37 PM
if you have electric heat then you pay to get gas hooked up. if you don't have electric heat and the gasis supposed to be the source, he pays for it.
11/24/2009 7:00:27 PM
^ basicallyif he wanted to, he could buy half a dozen space heaters for the house, your electric bill would suck donkey balls, but it would be legal[Edited on November 24, 2009 at 7:04 PM. Reason : ]
11/24/2009 7:04:06 PM
The existing unit is gas only. I don't mind paying the new customer fee or something similar to how you do when you set up the electricity bill in an apartment. But what bugs me is him wanting us to pay to run the lines from the tank to the heater plus a new regulator for the tank. When the AC got 'struck by lightening' in September and no longer worked, his solution was a window unit and the power bill was insane. For now, we've set up one of those plug-in furnace type heaters in the bedroom and it keeps us warm at night. And I've used my grandmaw's method of opening the oven up to get a quick heat up. But when winter really hits and it stays 30 all day, it will not be pleasant. Even now coming home to a 55 degree house sucks.
11/24/2009 7:10:26 PM
sounds like he's a cheap ass slumlord, gonna have to deal with it or move
11/24/2009 8:25:30 PM
Yeah, I agree. You arent going to get too far.As a landlord of 2, and soon to be 3 homes, if you came to me, I would have you deduct the required 'equipment' that stays with the house from rent. You obviously pay for everything else. Im lucky to have good tenants. When they come to me with a reasonable request, I do my best to take care of it promptly. The only request I have deferred to date was a new tenant wanting a glass storm door installed (this is a nice home). I agreed to install one, but not until later in the year. It all comes down to the lease, however. You should examine it for declarations about what you pay for and what the landlord pays for and if a heating unit is considered provided.If you live in the Raleigh area, you can tell him that if he doesnt pay for the equipment, you'll be verifying with Raleigh that he registered his home as a rental unit (he probably hasnt, and there are fines involved).[Edited on November 25, 2009 at 10:31 AM. Reason : .]
11/25/2009 10:30:22 AM
My guess is that the landlord should pay for the tank, but you pay to have it filled.I equate it to an AC unit. The landlord is required to have the unit there and in working order, but you are required to pay for the electricity that runs it.That is, of course, unless the lease specifically states that the house is being rented to you without a source for heat. Does the house have a fireplace?[Edited on November 25, 2009 at 10:37 AM. Reason : a]
11/25/2009 10:35:34 AM
I don't think it's legal to rent out a home without a working heat source, even if it is in the lease. As has been stated, that makes it not a habitable property. I'd say tell the landlord this, and let him know that you know he's responsible for fixing it or providing you with an alternate heat source. Filling the tank is your responsibility once it is able to be filled.If he still won't do it, go to your local housing authority and get the place inspected. It will probably fail and then you'll be able to get out of your lease (though you'll want to be ready to move b/c they probably won't let you stay there).
11/25/2009 10:58:29 AM
Also the last part of 42-42 states:
11/25/2009 11:08:41 AM
11/25/2009 11:10:41 AM
^^Well, that answers my question about fireplaces.But it still doesn't answer the question in regards to who pays the rent for the tank. The case can be made that the landlord has already provided the home with adequate means of heating, and that it is the tennants responsibility to pay the tank rental and have it filled.[Edited on November 25, 2009 at 11:14 AM. Reason : a]
11/25/2009 11:13:18 AM
Fuck this noise. Move.
11/25/2009 11:16:54 AM
Renting a tank for gas is no different than having to pay a deposit/installation charges for water or electricity.
11/25/2009 1:12:17 PM
The tank rental should be the responisibility of the tenant, however, if there is equipment that must be purchased, that would normally be present for the tank (would assume that is lines), the the landlord should be responsible.
11/25/2009 1:20:51 PM
Wow there is good advice in this thread, but there's a lot of anecdotal bullshit in here too.
11/25/2009 2:15:18 PM
Thanks guys! This has helped a ton! We totally want to pay for the gas and will submit a request in writing and get a formal invoice from the heat company on the required equipment. Hopefully this will be squared away before it gets cold.
11/25/2009 2:39:39 PM
Yeah I'm not 100% on this by any means but I feel like most gas companies don't rent out tanks unless you use a certain amount per year or something (or have a certain number of gas appliances). Even so they aren't going to rent out a tank and hook it to questionable piping, nor will they rent the valves and regulators to my knowledge (gots to buy them, most of them have finite service lives).On the surface it would seem like renting a tank would fall into the tenants domain, however the more I think about it, the more I'm going to say that the tank is a necessary part of the heating system. If you draw an analogy to electricity, then it would be like renting a house with the breaker box ripped out (the wiring is there on the powerline side and house side, just not anything that connects it) and then you have to rent a breaker box in order to use the electricity. DJE equated renting the tank as paying a deposit/installation charge for water/electrical service but you get a deposit back and a setup fee is a one time thing, not recurring. The tank is an integral part of the heating system and should be the responsibility of the landlord from Oct-May (my opinion). If he can convince the gas company to rent him a tank every year for 8 months and come out cheaper than buying one, more power to him.
11/25/2009 2:45:11 PM
11/25/2009 2:48:02 PM
Start chopping the porch/deck wood and put it in the fireplace, and send him pictures of the destruction daily. (in addition to not paying him a dime)
11/25/2009 2:49:04 PM
11/25/2009 3:09:49 PM
Landlord has to provide working heat, I would not pay for anything other than fuel.
11/25/2009 5:21:48 PM