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PDF Editor FAQ

I served a two month notice to my landlord that ended on 31st March 2020. Due to the countrywide lockdown that was imposed end of March, I haven't cleared out my furniture. The landlord is now asking for rent for the last two months. Is it fair?

Unless you say where on the globe you rented, you will not receive reliable answers on Quora. In Oregon, USA where I am licensed to practice, if this is a residential tenancy (you didn’t say) the landlord would have to look at the statute on abandoned property and the one on holdover tenancy and decide which situation the landlord was in. If it was a case of property abandoned after a tenancy termination, then LL would have to do notice and storage, and could charge you for the moving and storage, plus any rent lost during the time it took to get it out of there, if that was a cost incurred due to you failure to comply with the rental agreement, and also cleaning the place (which altogether might be close to the cost of rent) and sell your stuff to pay him/herself. If it is a holdover, then the landlord can charge you rent and still charge you for cleaning at the end. Either of those would be “fair.”But seriously, I wish all this was costing me was a couple month’s rent. And people who are right now as I am typing, going into induced comas to have a ventilator attached would probably give a couple month’s rent to trade places with you.

What event or situation caused you to stop talking to your neighbor?

First of all, I am older, moved a lot in my life and this has happened a lot. Me stop talking to a neighbor and my neighbor not talking to me.The most recent was a few months after I purchased my current home. I was cleaning up a bit in my front yard and noticed the neighbor out doing some gardening (not one of my strong points) I walked over and said Hi, she started to question me about “ALL the kids” in my home. Was I running a Frat house? I told her no, that one was my son the girl was his girlfriend and the two others were his closest friends (One was very white, pale almost albino and very high functioning autistic; the other was a very large African American but was in the same college as the other boys on 100% academic scholarship! The neighborhood his mom lived in was unsafe for him as he was accosted for bettering himself several times and his life threatened. So I let him come home to our home for weekends and long breaks with his mother’s blessing.) I didn’t explain the boys circumstances as I have here just left it as my son’s friends.The neighbor asked why she hadn’t seen my husband coming and going . . I replied he was gone . . as in divorced. She then picked up her stuff and now having lived here almost 12 years has not spoken to me since.Right before buying my current home I was short term in an apartment. It was newly built and I had an attached garage that I used for storage until I purchased a home. the apartment was 2 bedroom and I had furniture etc for a much larger space. I parked in my dedicated driveway instead of the garage.New neighbor moved in months after me directly above my unit. He decides that my drive was the perfect place to start parking. Nope . . I paid extra for that and it was mine independent of using the garage to park in or using the drive to park in. I explained this to the fellow and he continued to park there. I gave a call to the office to notify them of the lack of response from the new tenant and requested confirmation of what apartment the license plate belonged to. I then sent a registered letter reminding him that the driveway was my rental area, not common area and if he persisted in parking there his car would be towed.The next day was Saturday and he parked in my drive while I was at the grocery store. I now knew where he lived so I politely knocked on his door and requested he move the car. He refused so I dialed the office and told them to send the tow truck in front of him. He got mad and started making accusations of wrongdoing my my son and his friends. I requested he supply me with dates and times of what my son was accused of. He wrote a long list out of dates and times but now what they did. I asked for the charges he was claiming and he couldn’t specify but then said they were loud. So, I asked him to come with me to the office to settle things, but first he had the option to MOVE HIS CAR.He elected not to move the car BTW.We went with my son (and son’s laptop) to the office. We sat with the office manager and she asked what the issue was. I said he was again parked in my driveway and refused to move the car. He acknowledged he had been asked to move it in notes and by calls from the office. He felt it was just another parking spot since I didn’t park in the garage. The manager explained his error and told him as we saw the car being towed away that he would not be able to waive the fees for towing or storing his car.Then on to his charges against MY SON. I pulled up the list of dates and times and the upstairs neighbor agreed it was the list he put together. I asked the manager how often the other tenant had called the office with noise complaints . . 0 times. I asked if any of the other neighbors had called? 0 again.We then covered what “quiet” times were as listed in our rental agreement. Gee, all the times were within the designated times . . why? Because I was at work at 7 AM each workday and if the boys were home they wore headphones so I could sleep! Then I asked my son to bring up on his laptop his most recent schedule at UNC-CH where all the kids were enrolled and lived on campus except on long breaks and weekends when they occasionally visited me.The majority of the noise complaint dates were on days the kids (and no one stayed at my apt without my son at that time as he was the only one with a car) were at school. The apt manager then proceeded to discuss with the neighbor about how she HAD received multiple complaints about the neighbor for things like leaving trash outside his front door. Partying in the common stairwells and noise.I told the neighbor I would not speak to him again, that my first action would be to call the tow truck and IF he ever accused my son of wrongdoing again I would sue him for slander.A month later I got a call from the property manager about a strange black man casing apartments and the complainant said the person was living with me. I knew we had security cameras in the complex so I asked the manager to bring up the film for the night in question. It turned out to be HER SON and one of his friends walking around after midnight. I told her I would be happy to press slander charges on the behalf of my son’s friend but I didn’t think I could as the slander was against an adult. She said that she would handle it. That neighbor moved soon after.

Have you ever worked in a shared photography studio? What was your experience like? I would like to open a collective photography studio to work in and share with other photographers but don't know how to make it work.

I’ve shared a studio a number of times with mixed results. One studio I shared had too many photographers in it and it was always crowded. One of the shooters would constantly book space weeks in advance only to cancel it a day or even hours before. He had to be replaced as he just wouldn’t stop doing that and inconveniencing the other shooters. Privacy was always an issue. The money side was handled by the lease holder of the studio and we all shared equally in the operation costs.Another time I shared with one other shooter and it was a good match. One of the things that worked is that we both shot on location as well as in the studio, so we were seldom tripping over each other. We had enough space to that we could often shoot at the same time. And we had separate offices. Another important thing is to have enough office and storage space. Often a photographer is not shooting but processing files, meeting with clients or doing paperwork. It’s good to have private space for that.Beware of shouldering costs. I did have a studio once that I shared with one other photographer. I paid the bills and despite promises he never really came up with his share. He was a good partner from the standpoint of personality and we co-purchased expensive gear, but it that wasn’t enough. Eventually l needed to have someone who could also share in the operating costs of the studio. We parted on amicable terms, splitting up the gear we bought together.If I was to do this again, I would want everyone involved to put in an “investment” fee. This could be minimal, but something that would secure their share of the overhead. If someone runs into hard times it is used, if they leave with bills paid, they get it back. There would be a clear and written agreement as to what expenses are shared and how bill payments are structured. Each “member” would get their own locker for gear and their own desk. Items that are to be shared would be explicitly spelled out. As well, there should be a schedule for cleaning up the space, shared by all if a cleaning service is not employed.To share a space with others can be very rewarding. It is creatively stimulating. You can lend and borrow gear, saving lots of money. You share information and learn from each other. However all of this happens better with a clear understanding of everyone’s responsibilities.

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