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<blockquote data-quote="ProDave" data-source="post: 460024" data-attributes="member: 6969"><p>If you want the forum to help you it might be worth giving all the facts right from the start in chronological order.</p><p></p><p>Waiting until the second page to throw in the information about a Fire Brigade visit does not help to build up a clear picture of what actually happened and when.</p><p></p><p>I would be tempted to refuse to pay the tenants bill on the basis it was no longer an emergency as the power had been disconnected and the correct procedure would be to call the original repairers back to correct their mistake at their own cost.</p><p></p><p>BUT you have to be mindful of your responsibilities to your tenant, and your duty to house him. It could well be that for the duration the property was uninhabitable you should have put him up in a hotel at your cost. I know alternative accommodation is something included in my landlords insurance.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ProDave, post: 460024, member: 6969"] If you want the forum to help you it might be worth giving all the facts right from the start in chronological order. Waiting until the second page to throw in the information about a Fire Brigade visit does not help to build up a clear picture of what actually happened and when. I would be tempted to refuse to pay the tenants bill on the basis it was no longer an emergency as the power had been disconnected and the correct procedure would be to call the original repairers back to correct their mistake at their own cost. BUT you have to be mindful of your responsibilities to your tenant, and your duty to house him. It could well be that for the duration the property was uninhabitable you should have put him up in a hotel at your cost. I know alternative accommodation is something included in my landlords insurance. [/QUOTE]
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