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In Kentucky, a landlord can evict a tenant for failing to pay rent or for violating the lease or rental agreement. A tenant who is facing eviction for one of these reasons might have at least one defense available.
Kentucky has adopted the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (URLTA), which sets forth the rules and regulations landlords and tenants must follow when renting property. According to the URLTA, a tenant is required to pay rent on time and honor the lease. Failure to pay rent and violating the lease are the two most common reasons evictions occur. Before a landlord can evict a tenant for either of those reasons, though, the landlord must give the tenant notice.
Kentucky landlords can evict tenants for not paying rent when it is due. However, before filing the eviction lawsuit with the court, the landlord is required to give the tenant a seven-day notice. The notice must state that the tenant has seven days to pay rent or the lease will terminate and eviction proceedings will begin. (Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 383.660(2)).
A landlord can also evict a tenant for violating the lease or rental agreement. When a tenant violates the lease, the landlord is required to give the tenant a 14-day notice informing the tenant that the lease violation (by either stopping a certain act or paying for damages) must be fixed within 15 days or the lease will terminate.
If the tenant commits the same lease violation within six months of receiving notice for the first violation, the landlord is only required to give the tenant 14-day notice that states the lease will terminate at the end of 14 days. The landlord is not required to give the tenant any time to fix the violation. (Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 383.660(1).)
Examples of lease violations include throwing loud parties during designated quiet hours or having unauthorized people living in the apartment.
When a tenant does not pay rent or fix the lease violation during the appropriate time period, the landlord can file an eviction lawsuit with the district court of the county in which the rental property is located. The eviction lawsuit is also called a forcible entry and detainer suit. The landlord can also sue for unpaid rent or damages. (Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§ 383.210 and 383.685.)
The landlord must file a complaint and summons with the court to begin the eviction lawsuit. The tenant will then receive a copy of the complaint and summons, along with a date and time for a hearing before a judge. If the tenant wishes to challenge the eviction, the tenant must attend the hearing. At the hearing, the judge will listen to both the landlord and the tenant and come to a final decision regarding the eviction.
The tenant might find that challenging the eviction is not always the best option. For example, if the tenant is not successful in defending against the eviction lawsuit, the tenant might have to pay the landlord's court and attorneys' fees. The tenant could also receive a negative credit rating and be turned down for future housing. The best option for the tenant might be to try to talk to the landlord and negotiate a deal outside the court system. Many communities have free or low-cost mediation services that handle landlord-tenant disputes; local resources are available through Mediate.com and the American Arbitration Association. Nolo's article, Mediation: Ten Rules for Success also has more information.
A tenant facing eviction for failing to pay rent or violating the lease might have one or more reasons why the court should not grant the landlord's request for an eviction (defenses).
In Kentucky, the only legal way to evict a tenant is by receiving a court order from a judge allowing the eviction to proceed. When a landlord attempts to remove a tenant through any other means, such as changing the locks to the rental unit or shutting off the utilities, the tenant can use this as a defense to an eviction lawsuit, and can sue the landlord for an illegal eviction. Illegal evictions are often referred to as a "self-help" evictions or unlawful ousters. (Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 383.655.)
When evicting a tenant, it is very important that the landlord carefully follows all the rules set forth in the Kentucky statutes. When a landlord does not follow all the rules, the eviction might not be valid. For example, Kentucky landlords are required to give tenants a seven-day notice before filing an eviction lawsuit for failure to pay rent. When the landlord does not give the tenant any kind of notice and just files the lawsuit, the tenant can defend against the eviction by claiming lack of notice. The judge would then stop the lawsuit, and the landlord would be required to give the tenant a proper seven-day notice. At the end of the seven-day period, if the tenant still has not paid all the rent due and owing, the landlord can file a new eviction lawsuit.
It is important to note that this type of defense will not stop a justified eviction; it will merely delay it. As soon as the landlord fixes the deficient procedure, the eviction can continue.
Kentucky tenants might have a defense if facing eviction for not paying rent.
A tenant has seven days after receiving notice from the landlord to pay late rent in full. When the tenant pays during the seven-day period, the landlord must not continue with the eviction lawsuit (Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 383.660(2)). When paying rent during the seven-day time frame, the tenant should ask the landlord for a time-stamped receipt. Then, if the landlord continues with the eviction lawsuit anyway, the tenant will have proof that rent was paid during the appropriate time frame.
A landlord is required to keep a rental unit in Kentucky fit and habitable. This means the landlord must:
(Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 383.595.)
If the rental unit is in need of repair in any of the above areas, the tenant can choose to take one of the following options:
If the landlord tries to evict the tenant for failure to pay rent because the tenant either pays reduced rent or pays no rent, the tenant can defend against the eviction by proving that the landlord failed to make necessary repairs. The court might require the tenant to pay rent to the court, and then the court will determine who receives the rent at the end of the lawsuit. (Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 383.645.)
A landlord is required to give the tenant at least 15 days to fix a lease violation before filing the eviction lawsuit. If the tenant fixes the violation within 15 days, the landlord must not continue with the eviction. If the landlord proceeds with the eviction anyway, the tenant can use proof that the violation was fixed within the appropriate time frame as a defense against the eviction.
Remember that if this is the second notice of the same violation within a six-month period, the landlord does not need to give the tenant any time to fix the violation. At the end of a 14-day notice period, the lease will terminate and the landlord can proceed with the eviction. (Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 383.660(1).)
The federal Fair Housing Act and Kentucky's fair housing laws make it illegal for a landlord to discriminate against a tenant based on race, religion, gender, national origin, familial status (including children under the age of 18 and pregnant women), and disability. If a landlord tries to evict a tenant based on any of these characteristics, the tenant can use the discrimination as a defense to the eviction.
Legal aid organizations, such as the Legal Aid Network of Kentucky, can provide free or low-cost legal aid to those who qualify based on income. The Legal Aid Network of Kentucky also provides free online housing resources for anyone with questions. Tenants who live in federally assisted housing should also check out the tenant resource page at HUD.gov.
If you have more specific legal questions about your eviction case or the landlord has already retained a lawyer, you should probably also contact a lawyer. A lawyer can handle the whole case or give you advice on how to proceed. A lawyer can also let you know how likely you are to win your case. You might especially want to hire an attorney if you are confident of your case and your lease or rental agreement entitles you to attorneys' fees if you win in court.
For more articles on the subject, see the Evictions and Terminations section of Nolo.com.
For more information on tenant rights, see Every Tenant's Legal Guide (Nolo).