San Francisco Chronicle

Is a bedbug addendum to my lease a legal action?

- Rent Watch is produced by Project Sentinel. To submit a question, e-mail info@housing.org.

Q: I have lived in my apartment for just over three months, and I thought everything was going well until last week. That is when I started noticing itchy bumps on my body in the morning. When I showed them to my friend, he told me I had bedbugs.

When I contacted my manager and showed her the bites on my arms, she refused to accept responsibi­lity and produced a “Bedbug Addendum” that I had signed as part of my lease. She said that this Addendum completely waived my right to hold the management responsibl­e for any bedbug problem. Then she said I would have to pay for profession­al exterminat­ion services at my own expense.

Does this bedbug addendum relieve my landlord of all responsibi­lity for my bedbug infestatio­n? I have generally had a positive relationsh­ip with my on-site manager. She doesn’t complain if I am a day late with rent, and she previously arranged to have my leaking sink fixed. However, the bedbug bites combined with a huge potential exterminat­ion bill is really stressing me out.

A: A landlord has a duty to provide habitable premises to all tenants, including you. Under California Civil Code 1953, a tenant cannot be required to waive the landlord’s duty of habitabili­ty, regardless of whether the purported waiver is incorporat­ed in the rental agreement. California Civil Code section 1941.1 includes rental premises free from “rodents” and “vermin,” within the landlord’s duty of habitabili­ty. In our opinion, bedbugs fall squarely within the definition of vermin.

On the other hand, tenants also have duties, including the duty to report habitabili­ty problems promptly, so that bigger and more expensive problems can be avoided. The tenant also has a duty to avoid causing the habitabili­ty problem.

Therefore, if you brought the bedbugs into the unit or you noticed the infestatio­n and delayed reporting it, you could be held responsibl­e for the infestatio­n.

You should read this Addendum to your rental agreement very carefully. If the language purports to waive any of the duties imposed on the landlord under California law, it should not be enforceabl­e.

If the language merely reflects your legal responsibi­lity and that of the landlord as outlined above, it is “legal” but it cannot be used to assert a waiver of the landlord’s duty to you.

Given your manager’s response to your complaint, make sure you have stated your complaint in writing and reference the date you verbally notified her, in order to document that you met your duty of notice, and in the same writing, request that landlord honor its duty to promptly remedy the infestatio­n.

If she continues to refuse to honor her duty, contact your local fair housing or mediation program, or Project Sentinel at (888) 324-7468 or visit our website at www.housing.org.

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