The garage door may not be specified in the lease.
Renter broke garage door are they liable.
In that case it would be a general repair and maintenance item which in nearly all cases is the responsibility of the landlord.
I would side with your landlord unless the garage door got stuck because of an ongoing failure of the landlord to properly maintain the garage door.
The reality of life is that things in any home or apartment will break.
They just break and there s nothing a tenant could do to damage one.
Additionally they may violate local housing codes and will be in violation of most states implied warranty of habitability rules.
I say probably not because it all depends on what your lease says and who the lease says is responsible.
Thelease agreement states that the tenant pays the 1st 100 of all repairs.
If you had notified them of the problem with the garage door.
Probably not unless you caused the damage.
Unless they knocked the sensors out of alignment not much else they could do to it that would be their fault.
The landlord s failure his negligence caused the tenant s accident.
Thelease agreement states that the tenant pays the 1st 100 of all repairsif a garage door opener breaks who should pay the landlord or the tenant.
The tenant was genuinely hurt.
Even with aluminum garage doors springs are normal wear tear items every 5 10 years or so.
Garage door opener are permanent fixtures and become part of the structure so i would say you are responsible.
Landlords are liable for any foreseeable injuries deaths theft or damages that occur because of broken locks gates etc.
For example if a tenant falls and breaks his ankle on a broken front door step the landlord will be liable if the tenant can show all of the following.
As the tenant it is your responsibility to maintain and regularly inspect items to make sure that they stay in good working order.
Generally if you re a renter and you break something you pay to repair it.
Now that you have a better understanding of garage door basics let s talk about some of the more common problems and repairs.
If something breaks not because of you such as because of age the landlord is typically responsible.
They aren t expensive getting both springs replaced professionally around here costs about 150 for parts and labor.
Whether you own a home or rent one things eventually break malfunction or wear out.
Tenants should inform landlords immediately and request a fix.