Painting Walls (Tenant)(LTB): Difference between revisions

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10. The wall painted a different colour cannot be considered damage to the rental unit. <b><u>While the Landlord may not like the colour chosen by the Tenant, that is a matter aesthetics and interior decorating, not undue damage.</b></u>
10. The wall painted a different colour cannot be considered damage to the rental unit. <b><u>While the Landlord may not like the colour chosen by the Tenant, that is a matter aesthetics and interior decorating, not undue damage.</b></u>
==[http://canlii.ca/t/j0f52 CEL-72695-18 (Re), 2018 CanLII 141452 (ON LTB)]==
12. While it is understandable that on-going cooking and smoking within a rental unit will eventually discolour the walls and/or leave a substance on the walls.  These are two activities that one would expect to be normally done in one’s home.  After more than seventeen years of these continuous activities, without any repair or updating by the Landlord, it is expected that the interior paint (walls) would wear, especially given that the Regulation provides for a useful life of only ten years.  It is the Landlord’s obligation to maintain the rental unit.
13. The Landlord submitted that the Tenant never requested any maintenance for his unit.  However, regardless of whether or not a tenant requests maintenance, I am satisfied that with a long term tenancy such as in the case here, a landlord ought to be following up after their yearly unit inspections with issues such as interior painting and flooring to ensure they have not out lived their useful life.

Revision as of 04:50, 6 May 2020


CEL-74001-18 (Re), 2018 CanLII 88514 (ON LTB)

10. The wall painted a different colour cannot be considered damage to the rental unit. While the Landlord may not like the colour chosen by the Tenant, that is a matter aesthetics and interior decorating, not undue damage.


CEL-72695-18 (Re), 2018 CanLII 141452 (ON LTB)

12. While it is understandable that on-going cooking and smoking within a rental unit will eventually discolour the walls and/or leave a substance on the walls. These are two activities that one would expect to be normally done in one’s home. After more than seventeen years of these continuous activities, without any repair or updating by the Landlord, it is expected that the interior paint (walls) would wear, especially given that the Regulation provides for a useful life of only ten years. It is the Landlord’s obligation to maintain the rental unit.

13. The Landlord submitted that the Tenant never requested any maintenance for his unit. However, regardless of whether or not a tenant requests maintenance, I am satisfied that with a long term tenancy such as in the case here, a landlord ought to be following up after their yearly unit inspections with issues such as interior painting and flooring to ensure they have not out lived their useful life.