The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

NEIGHBOR’S SMOKE FOULS CONDO UNIT

- ByGaryM. Singer Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.) GaryM. Singer is a Florida attorney and board-certififie­d as an expert in real estate law by the Florida Bar. Contact him atwww. sunsentine­l.com/askpro or followhim onTwitter @GarySinger­Law.

Q: My neighbor in my condo is a heavy cigarette smoker and it is getting into my unit, making it hard for me to breathe. I have an air purififier that helps some but is not perfect. What can I do? — Louise

A: Your fifirst step in resolving a neighbor dispute is always communicat­ion. Speak with your neighbor nicely and ask him or her to help mitigate the problem, perhaps by investing in smokeless ashtrays or by smoking outdoors.

If that does not work, you can speak with your condo board. Some condos have rules that allow residents to smoke in certain areas, such as on the balcony. The condo may even be able to make the resident fifind ways to prevent the smoke from bothering neighbors. Weather-stripping or air fifiltrati­on installedi­n thesmoker’s unit may prevent thesmoke from escaping and seeping into neighborin­g units.

If your community is not able to help you, you may be able to turn to the legal system. Your city or town may have enacted secondhand-smoke ordinances that might help.

If none of those ideas work, you may need to take your neighbor to court. However, this is one of the areas in which even smart attorneys disagree. A secondhand-smoke case can be tough to win, but there is legal precedent. There was a case in Broward County, Fla., in 2005 in which the judge ruled that secondhand smoke was a nuisance and ordered the smoker to stop. I have even seen smaller lawsuits such as one in which a neighbor sued in small-claims court to get their dry-cleaning bills paid because of the smell left on their closet full of clothes.

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