JustPanda said:
In Colorado ESA does not need to be listed on the application and cannot be the sole determination to not rent under fair housing laws. Service animals are preceded by the ADA, ESAs are covered by Fair Housing. It doesn't matter if the landlord uses the term animal or pet etc. You might want to check about TX state law. We just finished a lawsuit w an ex landlord over the exact same thing and won via a summary judgement which included all of our legal fees and court costs. They had no issue with our autistic sons service dog (I think they knew better) but they went ballistic over our autistic sons ESA cat. They withheld our security deposit, filed an eviction notice, threatened to change the locks, and sent repeated nasty notices from their attorney detailing where they concluded we were breaking the lease (which we weren't). All of those things really did them a disservice in court. They are looking at multiple tens of thousands of dollars to remedy the situation and via damages and legal and court costs now. Not sure if they just wanted to pick a fight to pick a fight, but going after the ESA of a highly autistic 7 year old that has a trained service dog and all of the required documentation to back up each didn't work out well for them. The judge even ripped them for using animal vs pet as an overt attempt to dissuade eligible renters. I think they basically considered it steering. I'd need to ask our attorney but I know the judge didn't look kindly on how they presented it on the lease and was even less thrilled that they recognized their responsibility under the ADA but knowing made ever attempt possible to fail to comply w fair housing laws.
Just because you're in the 1% who actually have a legitimate service animal doesn't mean it's not a problem and isn't being abused left and right. You should be up in arms about all the people who abuse it, because that's exactly why that landlord reacted the way he did (and why it is harder and harder for those with legitimate needs as a direct result), even though he was clearly in the wrong and is on the extreme level of being unreasonable and is an obvious *******, and sounds like he deserved the outcome. Landlords know that the default is they are being lied to. So it's actually very reasonable to question it and try to not have to deal with it. It's a big red flag having a tenant who is being dishonest from the onset (I'm not saying that that is you), and that scenario leads to a significantly higher chance of headaches down the line, so I wouldn't want to even take that chance if I had a rental. The odds are not in their favor that it is a legitimate service animal, especially since it can't be questioned. Everyone knows more often than not they are being taken advantage of, because they have no rights to counter it. And it's even worse if tenants don't bother to disclose it at all, just because they might not have to. It adds skepticism and distrust to the relationship right off the bat, and for some landlords, they might look for any opportunity to get out of it.
So from my perspective, I'd do everything in my power to avoid being put into that situation. The owner of the property has much more to lose than the tenant in terms of their investment, especially since they can get around even having to put down an additional deposit for the owner of the property to try to recoup potential losses and try to counter that higher risk. IMO if you have a legitimate service animal that is well behaved and you know won't cause damage, then there should be no reason to NOT provide an additional deposit; if your animal won't cause damage, then you'll get that deposit back at the end of the day, so it's a fair compromise to help both sides feel more comfortable about the situation, from my perspective. But nope, they get to sneak in their animals with no need to put down added deposit to cover higher chance of damages from having animals. Who wouldn't take advantage of this situation? Seems like a no brainer. The naive idiots who are being honest about their "pets" are stupid to not lie, if only to not have to pay the deposit. So where does that leave the landlords? Added risk + inability to question + lack of added deposit to protect your investment + potentially higher risk tenant proven by being dishonest at the onset + tenant being bulletproof with no accountability under threat of lawsuit = not worth it.
Your example is the extreme, and an obvious POS landlord, but apparently all the rest are just supposed to accept it and not be able to question it. They know they have no leg to stand on to protect their investment against liars, so what options do they have other than accepting they have no rights in this scenario?
Again, I'm not defending the guy in your situation. I'm just saying that this is a big problem that is being allowed to exist with no ability to avoid it. Personally, I wouldn't want to get myself locked into that situation.