Toronto Star

Family to sue over home’s trashing

Renters made off with goods amd caused extensive damage to home listed on Kid & Coe

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI THE CANADIAN PRESS

Thieves made off with a 50-inch TV, treasured family heirlooms and a carefully curated sneaker collection, but it’s their son’s plundered piggy bank that really upsets Daniel Habashi and Andrea Van Leeuwen.

The Toronto homeowners say they were shocked to find their centuryold Victorian row house trashed and ransacked after renting it out for a weekend in July on the Airbnb-like website Kid & Coe.

They are now suing the New Yorkbased company and estimate damages to the home and the value of stolen property total $100,000.

“The (renters) ransacked our home, they emptied drawers out, cleared out closets, they used our own luggage to sort through all our belongings to determine what to take, what to sell,” said Van Leeuwen, who suspects more than 50 people trampled through their house at a raucous party.

Habashi said they believed they were renting to a young couple with a toddler, but later learned the renter had used fraudulent credit card informatio­n. They learned something was wrong July 22, the day after the guest checked in.

They were visiting New York when a neighbour emailed a noise complaint that evening. Early the next morning, Habashi noticed several alerts on his mobile phone reporting smoke in the house.

They called a security company to investigat­e and it discovered eight adults sleeping in the home. They were evicted and a relative filed a police report.

Until this experience, Van Leeuwen said they had been fans of the familyfrie­ndly site, which specialize­s in connecting travellers with homes stocked with kid supplies such as sippy cups, safety gates and cribs.

And so she was especially distressed to find her children’s toys broken and apparently used as drug parapherna­lia, and their books burned by cigarettes.

Ever since, she said her 4- and 5year-old sons have been “highly distressed.”

“I can still smell the hint of the smoke that was in the home, it’s a constant reminder for me of what has happened in the home as well as our son just asking questions — asking if he’s safe, asking if his stuff is OK.”

A spokespers­on for Kid & Coe said the company is taking the family’s concerns seriously, but noted that homeowners are responsibl­e for securing their own insurance.

“This is truly, truly horrifying, what’s happened to Dan and Andrea,” Laura Hall said when reached Thursday in Copenhagen, where she’s based. “We’re doing everything we can to make it right.”

Hall said the four-year-old business has never offered insurance, but has been working for two years on adding protection for users.

“Obviously, with this situation we know that this is something that people want and expect and if we can offer it we’d like to,” said Hall, describing Kid & Coe as a small business with about 1,300 clients in more than 50 countries. That includes 20 properties in Canada.

Company founder Zoie Kingsbery Coe added in an emailed statement, also posted to Facebook, that she was “wholeheart­edly sorry” for a process that “has taken far too much time” to resolve.

“I will be the first to admit that looking back at this we have not handled it as best we could — it has been far too drawn out which I know has been incredibly frustratin­g for the family,” said Coe, adding that security measures are under review and that comprehens­ive insurance is coming. “We have had a major setback but we will put things right for this family and, of course, for the safety and trust of our community.”

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