A recent High Court case found that a tenant can only be evicted for anti-social behaviour that he/ she is accused of allowing on or near the premises if he/ she has actual or constructive knowledge of the behaviour the subject of complaints.
In this particular case, the tenant was in the UK for some months and asked her parents to mind her young son while she was away. A row broke out between the landlord’s son and her own older son. Following that altercation, the tenant’s older son and about twenty others went to the landlord’s house, which was in the same estate and caused damage to his home and van.
The landlord immediately issued a Notice of Termination (formerly Notice to Quit) on the tenant based on the anti- social behaviour carried out at the instance of her son.
The Residential Tenancies Act 2004 obliges all tenants not to behave themselves in any anti-social way within the premises but also requires the tenant not to allow any other occupiers or visitors to behave in an anti-social manner.
The Residential Tenancies Tribunal (The Tribunal) easily found that the group attack on the landlord’s house, led by her son, was an example of anti- social behaviour. But the tenant herself was away in the UK and was unaware of her son’s behaviour that night. Despite that, the Tribunal upheld her eviction as it found she had allowed the anti- social behaviour because her parents, who had been tasked with minding her son, had done nothing to stop the anti-social behaviour from being carried out.
The decision was appealed to the High Court who disagreed with the Tribunal finding. It found the interpretation of “allow” to be too narrow and therefore unfair. How could the tenant have allowed certain behaviour to occur when she knew nothing about it?
The court found that a person only “allows” anti- social behaviour to occur when he/she has actual or constructive knowledge of the behaviour carried out by those other parties. Finding out later about the bad behaviour carried out, even if on her behalf, will not mean she allowed such behaviour.
The court found there was nothing in any of the Tribunal’s findings to indicate that the tenant could reasonably have anticipated the trouble or taken steps to prevent this one-off incident of anti-social behaviour from happening.
The court allowed the appeal and cancelled the Determination Order made by the Tribunal.
Iyaba v Residential Tenancies Tribunal [2023] IEHC 491.
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