Can a Landlord Move In and Become a Roommate of a Tenant As a Means to Negate the Residential Tenancies Act Protections?

The Residential Tenancies Act Protections Apply to Most Housing Situations. An Exception Arises When the Landlord Is Sharing a Kitchen or Bathroom With the Tenant; However, If the Landlord Moves In After the Tenancy Began the Exception May Be Inapplicable and the Residential Tenancies Act Protections Will Remain.

Understanding the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 Exemption When Sharing Rented Premises With the Landlord

Residential Lease Document Generally, when a landlord is sharing a kitchen or bathroom within the rental unit of a tenant, or tenants, the duties and rights of the landlord and tenant relations are wholly governed by the common law as well as any contract provisions with the lease agreement, if any, without the statutory protections that would otherwise apply.

The Law

The Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, S.O. 2006, Chapter 17, prescribes the rights and duties that apply to most landlord and tenant relationships.  In most circumstances, the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, fails to apply to circumstances where kitchen or bathroom facilities are shared with the landlord or certain family members of the landlord.  Specifically, the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, states:

5 This Act does not apply with respect to,

...

(i) living accommodation whose occupant or occupants are required to share a bathroom or kitchen facility with the owner, the owner’s spouse, child or parent or the spouse’s child or parent, and where the owner, spouse, child or parent lives in the building in which the living accommodation is located;

...

As per section 5 of the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, as shown above, the protections prescribed within the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 are exempted when a kitchen or bathroom facilities are shared with the landlord.  In such circumstances, the applicable obligations and protections are prescribed by the Commercial Tenancies Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. L.7, as well as the common law including general contract law principles as was stated within Newman v. Glanville, 2019 ONSC 1040 wherein it was said:

[7]  Mr. Newman initially sought to evict Mr. Glanville from the home by applying to the Landlord and Tenant Board under the Residential Tenancies Act 2006. The board declined jurisdiction to hear the application citing section 5(i) of the Residential Tenancies Act which excludes jurisdiction in circumstances where the landlord and tenant share either a bathroom or a kitchen. Mr. Newman and Mr. Glanville share both. In those circumstances, the Commercial Tenancies Act applies rather than the Residential Tenancies Act.

Interestingly, circumstances do occur where a tenancy arrangement began without the sharing of kitchen or bathroom facilities with the landlord; however, at a later time, the landlord began sharing kitchen or bathroom facilities with the tenant, or tenants.  Essentially, at some point after the tenancy began, the landlord became a roommate.  In this circumstance, the legal question may arise as to whether the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 becomes exempted when the landlord becomes a roommate.  Indeed, this situation involving a landlord seeking exemption from the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 after becoming a roommate, or seeking to become a roommate, arose in the case of Cowie v. Bindlish, 2010 ONSC 2628, as an Appeal to the Divisional Court from decisions of the Landlord Tenant Board, and wherein it was said:

[2]  The appellant appeals two orders of the board.  The first is an order made on May 4, 2007 dismissing an application brought by him, as tenant, against the respondent, his landlord, for relief in consequence of various alleged violations of the Act by the respondent. The second is an order made on June 22, 2007 dismissing the appellant’s application for a review of the first order.

[3]  The central issue in this appeal is whether the board had jurisdiction to consider the appellant’s first application. The board held that it did not and its decision was subsequently confirmed by the board, composed of a different member, in dismissing the appellant’s application for a review. This issue requires an interpretation of section 5 (i) of the Act which reads, in part, as follows;

5. This Act does not apply with respect to,

(i) living accommodation whose occupant or occupants are required to share a bathroom or kitchen facility with the owner, the owner’s spouse, child or parent or the spouse’s child or parent, and where the owner, spouse, child or parent lives in the building in which the living accommodation is located.

[4]  The appellant does not dispute that living accommodation which is the subject of this appeal falls within the scope of section 5 (i). However, it is his position that the respondent, his landlord, did not “live in the building in which the living accommodation is located” at the time that he and the respondent entered into their tenancy agreement and, therefore, that the Act does apply to the room which he rented.

[5]  The board’s decision on this jurisdictional issue is set out in paragraph 2 of the first order and reads as follows;

2. From the evidence given by the Tenant and Ms Evans, it has been determined that the Tenant rented a “room” in addition to being able to use the kitchen and bathroom which formed part of a larger complex, prior to April 1, 2007. Based on the Tenant’s own evidence, he did not have exclusive use or possession of the balance of the house as part of his tenancy. The Landlord and her family chose to move into the balance of the house and at that point, the Act is clear that the tenancy between the parties is not subject to the Act. Any issues that may have arisen between the parties from that point forward fall outside the jurisdiction of the Landlord and Tenant Board.

[6]  The board’s second decision on the appellant’s application for a review reads as follows;

I am not satisfied that there may be a serious error in the order or that a serious error occurred in the proceedings.

I find that the Landlord did not unilaterally change the nature of the agreement; that it was her intention from the start to live in the residential complex. She bought the house on January 2, 2007 and the tenancy of the Tenant started on January 12, 2007. The house was almost empty of furniture at that time because the Landlord left for India on January 10, 2007 and did not return until February 21, 2007. The Tenant was the sole occupant during this period of time. It would be unreasonable to expect that she fill the house with her possessions and go to India for a month and a half – leaving the house with a stranger as the sole occupant. The request to review order CET-00207 is dismissed. The order is confirmed and remains unchanged.

[7]  These extracts reveal that the second board member, although agreeing with the ultimate decision of the first board member, did so for quite a different reason.

[8]  The transcript of the second hearing before the board reveals that the board member agreed, early in the hearing, with the appellant’s counsel that the respondent could not deprive the board of jurisdiction “by simply moving in and out of the premises”.  She then invited the parties to “argue the merits of the appellant’s application which was filed in the first place, which she referred to as a “Tenant Rights Application”. There then followed a series of exchanges between the board member and the parties, their representatives and others, in no apparent order, in which each gave unsworn evidence.

[9]  According to the respondent;

•  She was not living in the house on January 11, 2007 when she rented a shared room to the appellant or on the following day when he moved in.

•  She would have rented the whole place, “then I’m not moving in. I was in a moving process. My stuff was there”. This referred to her dining table “and some stuff over there”.

•  She intended to move into the house.

[10]  According to the appellant;

•  It was not brought to his attention at the time that he rented his room that the respondent had just bought the house and intended to move in.

[11]  Having heard this evidence, the board member stated that she wanted to hear evidence directly from the appellant rather than through the words of his representative. Her request was made in the following words;

I want to know from you what did you think was going to happen in this place?  What exactly when you went there, what did you think you were renting?

[12]  The appellant then responded as follows;

Just a room in a shared accommodation with other tenants, which they actually showed on many occasions to other people from the ads that ran in the paper for a room for rent. I rented one room there, and of course I shared the kitchen, shared the common living room and bathroom; but there was nobody residing at the residence when I moved in. And this was showed on many occasions to other people, to rent out the other two rooms, and then they told me on several occasions that they had rented them out and they’d be moving in, these other people would be moving who they showed the rooms to, which they never did, other than the one in the basement. He moved in like in the 3rd week of February, and then his friend moved in like a week later. So the two of them resided in the basement, two gentlemen.

And they continued showing the rooms for rent on a weekly basis, and they weren’t able to rent them out. So I offered to pay more money and take over the whole upper level; but they wanted $1,100.00 and I could only afford $750.00. So they said that was not enough. Well, I couldn’t afford more. When it came to the 1st of April they gave me a 30-day notice.

[13]  Before the hearing was completed, the board member interjected with her ruling.

I think under the circumstances that there was no change, that the landlord from the start planned to live in that place; and therefore the Board has no jurisdiction over this matter.

[14]  There was no evidence at either hearing that the respondent told the appellant prior to renting the room to him that it was her intention to move into the house.

[15]      Accordingly, the record shows that;

I.  The first board member accepted jurisdiction solely on the basis of the respondent having moved into part of the house more than two months after the appellant moved into his room;

II.  The second board member confirmed the decision of the first board member solely on the basis of her finding that the respondent had intended to move into part of the house at the time that she rented the room to the appellant.

[16]  It is my respectful view that neither view was a sufficient basis on which the board was entitled to decline jurisdiction. Both board members erred in law, albeit differently, in their respective interpretation of section 5 (i) of the Act and we must now interfere. The section explicitly creates an exemption from the general application of the Act only if the person in the category of the respondent “lives in the building in which the living accommodation is located”. That means that the respondent was required to live in the building at the time when she rented the room to the appellant in order for the exemption to apply. It was not sufficient that she merely intended to move in at some subsequent time. Nor was it sufficient that she actually did move in at a subsequent time.

[17]  Any interpretation of section 5 (i) of the Act that would permit the respondent to unilaterally cause the board to be deprived of its jurisdiction to hear the appellant’s application by forming an intention in her own mind without communicating it to the appellant or by moving into the house at a later time would be contrary to the language of the section and the intention of the Legislature and would be grossly unfair. It would also effectively result in an unwarranted revision of the tenancy agreement that the parties had made.

Summary Comment

Generally, the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, applies to tenancy arrangements; however, an exemption arises where the landlord, or certain family members of the landlord, are sharing a kitchen or bathroom with the tenants.  With this said, an exception to the exemption for when a kitchen or bathroom is shared may arise if the landlord begins sharing a kitchen or bathroom after the tenancy arrangement began.

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