Your Rights Bytes #4 - Subleasing
Question: Can the park
prevent residents from subleasing their mobilehome?
Background: A MHP
resident/homeowner contacted me to report that the park managers were avoiding
their responsibility by not evicting a bad resident. In this
particular park where subletting was allowed, the bad resident happened to be
the homeowner’s roommate. The homeowner did not want the unforgiving
task of kicking out the roommate so she demanded that the manager get the
roommate out. The manager told the homeowner that she alone was
responsible for evicting her “tenant”. The caller did not agree with
the manager’s interpretation of the law and contacted me for clarification. I
gave her the same simple answer. This is one of those cases where
subleasing can be a nightmare for the resident.
In another case, a woman called me from a resident-owned MHP
located in a Southern California coastal city. This woman was
renting her home to weekend vacationers which caused resentment among many
neighbors. In this particular park there was no prohibition on
subleasing, and indeed some residents were quietly subletting their homes on
long-term leases. However, this particular resident was registered as a
“landlord” on Airbnb.com, and her tenants were short-term
renters. This created what was viewed as a stream of strangers who
were using the park’s common amenities, such as the clubhouse and the pool,
disrupting the other residents’ sense of community. This resident
asked me if it was “fair” for others to sublet their homes while it she was
resented for subletting her home to “weekenders”; wasn’t it all “subletting”
anyway? Without all the facts of the case – and without looking at
the HOA’s governing documents -- I told her that I could not answer that
question, and yet furthermore it could be argued that renting her home to
subletters did not give her the right to allow the subletters access to the
common amenities. I suggested that the matter should be brought
before the HOA’s general membership for debate and vote.
Answer: Yes. Most mobilehome parks
have rules that prohibit homeowners from subleasing their mobilehomes, even in
hardship cases. However, in cases of seniors who require medical convalescence
away from their homes, they may sublet for up to one year. (Civil Code
§798.23.5)
- Stephanie Reid, formerly on staff with the Senate Select Committee on Manufactured Home Communities
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