Our Legal Plans are available in
British-Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Ontario.To continue, please select your desired province from the dropdown menu:
Our Legal Plans are available in
British-Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Ontario.To continue, please select your desired province from the dropdown menu:
Federal, provincial and local laws provide tenants with defences they can use to delay, pause or even prevent a landlord from evicting them from their home. Working with a tenant lawyer who understands the laws in your area is a powerful way to protect your rights and keep a roof over your family’s head.
The terms and conditions of your lease agreement combined with local laws give you powerful protections against unlawful evictions. A lawyer with experience in tenant law can very quickly determine your best defence and provide a plan of action to avoid losing your place to live.
Below we cover some of the most common defences a lawyer can use to prevent your landlord from violating your rights.
Receiving a Notice to Vacate can send shivers down your spine. Where will you live? Will your credit be damaged? Both your lease and the law dictate the rules for providing notice to vacate. If your landlord has not followed those rules, even if you did not pay rent, a lawyer can help you pause the eviction. If you assert a defence based on improper notice, your landlord will be forced to start the process over, buying you time to find a permanent solution to the dispute.
Eviction is already stressful enough. Don’t go it alone. Get a personal plan from LegalShield and leverage your lawyer’s knowledge of eviction law to protect your family and your finances.
If you pay only a portion of your rent and your landlord accepts it, knowing that the partial payment does not meet the lease requirements, the landlord typically loses their right to evict you during that rental period. If you make a partial payment, your landlord may try to get you to sign a document saying you waive your rights to claim this defence.
If your landlord failed to make repairs they are responsible for under the terms of your lease or federal, provincial or local law, and you paid for the repairs out of your own pocket, you may be able to deduct the money you spent from your rent payment and your landlord cannot evict you for failure to pay rent.
LegalShield lawyers are well versed in all the rules, regulations and laws that govern eviction and can use them to help you fight back.
Federal and provincial laws require landlords to fulfill certain obligations to their tenants. If they fail to meet those obligations, they generally forfeit the right to evict you and may even owe you money.
Many violations of your lease or laws such as the Fair Housing Act, which prevents landlords from evicting you do to race, religion, or gender, can become strong defenses to eviction.
Even if all you need is a bit of legal advice by phone, getting a personal plan from LegalShield is the most affordable way to get it.
If you’ve done something you have a right to do, such as reporting your landlord to a regulatory agency for discrimination, and your landlord tries to evict you shortly thereafter, you may defend yourself by claiming the eviction was unlawful. Did you receive an eviction notice after taking any of the following actions?
To use this defence, your landlord does not have to have necessarily initiated a formal eviction. The retaliatory eviction defence can apply even if your landlord suddenly raises your rent, refuses to renew your month-to-month lease, prevents you from accessing a part of the rental property or turns off utilities like gas, water or electric. Courts will generally assume eviction was retaliatory if the landlord takes action against you within a certain time period, typically 60 days to one year from your instigating action.
Besides the variety of defences, you may have and the general complexity of landlord and tenant law, eviction can cause a lot of anxiety.
For as little as $49.95 per month, you can get unlimited legal advice and consultation. Furthermore, your lawyer can review any documents, such as your lease or the eviction notice, provide feedback and even represent you by writing letters or making calls to your landlord. Your plan also includes time for your lawyer to defend you in court. These legal services would easily cost several hundred if not thousands of dollars if you hired a lawyer directly.