Legal Question in Landlord & Tenant Law in Ohio

Hello,

I signed a lease in 2012 that was for a one year period. Prior to expiration, I renewed for another year, with the lease expiring September 30, 2014. In April 2014, I gave my landlord notice that I intended to early terminate the lease (gave 60 days pursuant to the lease agreement) and vacated at the end of June 2014. When completing the termination process, I noticed that my initial lease agreement and renewal did not state the terms of early termination. My landlord is trying to collect a month's rent as they were able to lease the unit one month after my vacate date and accepted all keys and other forms without me signing into a separate agreement regarding early termination fees owed. Do I have any legal basis for not paying them the termination fees?


Asked on 10/20/14, 10:38 am

1 Answer from Attorneys

Eric Willison Eric Eastman Willison

In Ohio, if a tenant to a residential lease agreement wishes to leave early, unless the landlord agrees to let the tenant out of the lease then the normal rule is that the tenant will owe for all rents through the end of the lease term. However, the landlord is under a duty to try to find another tenant to mitigate the damages caused by the old tenant's (in this case your) actions.

It sounds like from the fact situation that you describe that your landlord was able to rerent the premises prior to the end of the lease term with you. Any money that that new tenant paid must be credited against the amounts that you would have owed through the end of the lease agreement. But if there was one month where the apartment was vacant and you did not pay rent for that period of time then the landlord would have the right to that rent.

Early lease termination clauses are clauses which actually favor the tenant, allowing the tenant to get out of the lease by paying only one or two months' rent when many many more months would normally have been owed. Thus the fact that you did not have an early termination fee does not mean that you would not be required to pay the landlord's damages. But in your case the landlord's damages were minimal and he can only charge you for the amount of time that the apartment was on rented due to your leaving early.

Very truly yours,

Eric E. Willison

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Answered on 10/20/14, 12:20 pm


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