Judge brands owner “a classic rogue landlord” and orders huge payment

Judge brands owner “a classic rogue landlord” and orders huge payment

A landlord has been ordered to pay £37,000 in fines and costs after council inspectors found 18 tenants including children and infants, sharing a semi-detached house.

The home, in London’s Edgware, was originally built as a three-bedroom linked terraced house had been converted into eight bedsits and was being operated without a licence.

Following complaints from neighbours about noise, antisocial behaviour and overcrowding, council inspectors entered the property with a warrant accompanied by the police.

They found extreme overcrowding with one room being shared by six people including infants and another room of only 7.8 square metres being occupied by two tenants.

As well as being overcrowded the building did not to meet safety standards, had an inadequate fire alarm system, and no safe means of escape in case of fire. 

Barnet council officers reported that the rear garden was filled with building waste, mattresses and other debris, that there was a kitchen in a separate structure in the garden, and there was disrepair throughout the property.

In November landlord Charles Egbiremolen was found guilty of nine offences including failing to licence the property, management and safety offences and failure to supply statutory information to the council.

Summing up, the District Judge commented that in his view Egbiremolen was “not a person who responds positively to laws and regulations.”

In sentencing him this month, the judge described Egbiremolen as a “classic rogue landlord.” 

Subject to an individual assessment any landlord prosecuted by the council and convicted by the courts is no longer likely to be considered to be a “fit and proper” person to manage a licensable HMO in the borough.

A council spokesperson says: “The safety of our residents is paramount and we will not tolerate landlords who flout the rules in Barnet. It is the responsibility of every landlord to make sure that their properties comply with the law and their tenants are safe. Landlords who fail to licence or manage their HMOs or let properties in a state of disrepair risk prosecution or penalty notices of up to £30,000 per offence”

This article is taken from Landlord Today