Paying Rent Into Board Involves a Special Request Due to Maintenance Concerns | Marketing.Legal™
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Paying Rent Into Board Involves a Special Request Due to Maintenance Concerns


Question: Can tenants legally withhold rent to prompt a landlord to make repairs?

Answer: Withholding rent as a way to pressure a landlord into making repairs is unlawful. Instead, tenants can file a Tenant Application About Maintenance (Form T6) with the Landlord Tenant Board and request to pay rent into the Board while the issue is addressed. This approach legally safeguards tenant interests without breaching rental obligations. For more information and to navigate this process seamlessly, Marketing.Legal offers strategic guidance tailored to your legal challenges.


Is It Legal For a Tenant to Withhold Payment of Rent Until Maintenance or Repair Issues Are Completed By the Landlord?

A Tenant That Withholds Rent From a Landlord Does so Unlawfully. If a Tenant Has Unaddressed Maintenance Complaints, Then the Tenant Should Apply to Pay the Rent As Due Into the Landlord Tenant Board.


Understanding That Withholding Rent From a Landlord Requires Payment of Rent Into the Landlord Tenant Board

Paying Rent Into Board Involves a Special Request Due to Maintenance Concerns A tenant that is disgruntled about a perceived state of disrepair of a rental unit may prefer to withhold rent payments as a means to motivate the landlord to address the maintenance issues raised by the tenant; however, the withholding of due rent is unlawful, even during a maintenance dispute, and may result in consequences that adversely affect the tenant.

The Law

If a tenant withholds rent in an effort to manipulate a landlord into addressing maintenance issues, the tenant does so improperly and unlawfully.  Rather than wrongfully withholding rent, the tenant may lawfully submit a Tenant Application About Maintenance (Form T6) to the Landlord Tenant Board and the tenant may also apply to the Landlord Tenant Board to remit rent that becomes due to the Landlord Tenant Board instead of to the landlord.

The cases of Haran v Westover, 2021 CanLII 101368, O.C. v. J.M.2018 CanLII 86120, D.P.J. v. A.C.2011 CanLII 26905, among others, address the impropriety of the withholding of rent by a tenant.  Specifically, per Haran, O.C., and D.P.J., the Landlord Tenant Board said:


14.  It is important to note that the Act does not provide any authority to the tenants to withhold rent payments in order to compel specific performance by a landlord. ...


3.  As I stated at the hearing, there is no legal justification for withholding rent.  If there are lingering maintenance issues, and the Landlord does not address them, the Tenant may apply for relief in a T6 application. ...


3.  The Tenant did not pay the rent for February and March because of maintenance issues in the rental unit. The Tenant further stated at the hearing that she did not intend to pay the rent until all maintenance issues are dealt with by the Landlord.

4.  I find that there is no provision in the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 (the 'Act') that allows a tenant to withhold rent because of outstanding maintenance issues. ...

As per the cases above, among others, a tenant wrongfully withholds rent regardless of any failure to maintain allegations against the landlord.  However, when a tenant files a Tenant Application About Maintenance (Form T6) in complaint of failure to adequately maintain a rental unit, the tenant may also apply to remit rent that becomes due to the Landlord Tenant Board instead of the landlord.  This availability to apply to remit rent to the Landlord Tenant Board instead of the landlord is prescribed at section 195(1)(b) of the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, S.O. 2006, Chapter 17, wherein it is stated:


195 (1) Where the Board considers it appropriate to do so, the Board may, subject to the regulations,

....

(b)  permit a tenant who is making an application for an order under paragraph 1 of subsection 29 (1) to pay all or part of the rent for the tenant’s rental unit into the Board.

The process of applying to remit rent into the Landlord Tenant Board instead of the landlord, a tenant must commence a proceeding via the Tenant Application About Maintenance (Form T6) process and thereafter a Request to Pay Rent to the Board on a Tenant Application About Maintenance.

Summary Comment

Instead of withholding rent in an effort to pressure a landlord into addressing maintenance issues, a tenant with a legal dispute should apply to the Landlord Tenant Board to remit rent as due into the Landlord Tenant Board rather than to the landlord.

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