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Tenant Follows Landlord’s Permission To Park Anywhere And Faces Deposit Deduction In Court Battle

by Jeffrey Stone
January 26, 2026
in Social Issues

A young couple settled into a budget basement rental near their new jobs, dealing with street parking headaches that brought tickets and a hit-and-run. When they asked the landlord for better options, she casually emailed them to park anywhere they wanted, so they followed suit and used the front yard just like the upstairs neighbors.

At lease end, they handed back a cleaner space than they received and requested their full $1,500 security deposit. Weeks later came a partial $700 check, with the rest sliced off to “re-sod the lawn”, despite the yard already being mostly weeds and bare patches. The landlord, eyeing a house sale, apparently hoped the tenants would cover her landscaping upgrade.

A Redditor successfully sued landlord in small claims court and won back full security deposit.

Tenant Follows Landlord's Permission To Park Anywhere And Faces Deposit Deduction In Court Battle
Not the actual photo.

'Landlord Tries to Keep Security Deposit... Ummm, No'

About 10 years ago, my at-the-time girlfriend (now wife) and I moved from the area we went to college to an apartment near where we planned to start our careers.

I say it was an apartment, but it was really the basement of a house that the landlord had walled off to create 2 "apartments" to rent.

The place was kinda crappy, but the rent was cheap for the area, and we were close to work.

Everything was fine for a few months, but the only parking for us was on the street out front -

the couple that rented the upstairs "apartment" had rights to the garage and driveway (they paid more than we did).

Suddenly my car got a couple BS tickets for parking on the street - I'm guessing some a__-clown cop needed to meet their quota - and my girlfriend's car got...

This crap had to stop, so we emailed the landlord (her preferred form of communication) to ask if there's anywhere safe for us to park.

She replies, "Park anywhere you want."

We had noticed that our upstairs neighbors usually eschewed the driveway to park in the front yard (they were horribly lazy),

so we figured that would be a good spot for us too. We parked in the front yard the rest of the year.

We figured that would be the end of it. We finished our lease, left the place in better shape than we found it, and requested our $1500 security deposit back.

After a couple weeks, we got a check for $700... WTF!?!?!? Since there was no explanation, we asked the landlord for one,

and she replied that the deducted amount was to "re-sod the lawn", claiming that parking on it had damaged it.

Now, I was the one who cut the grass at this house while we stayed there, so I was well aware

that the lawn was more weeds and bald spots than grass - picture the African savanna in mid-summer.

No one had ever lifted a finger to landscape any part of the property, but the landlord wanted to sell the house once the leases were up,

and she figured she could get the renters to pay for a nice, new lawn.

I complained to the landlord: didn't care. I put in a complaint with the local housing department: didn't care.

I threatened to take her to court: didn't care. So, that's what I did - took her to small claims court.

I had never sued anyone before, so I was going in prepared! I took pictures of the entire front yard - the area that we "damaged"

was actually one of the best patches of grass, though it did have a small rut that my tires made when the yard was muddy in the summer.

I got testimonials from our upstairs and across-the-street neighbors. Most importantly, I printed out the email where the landlord told us to park anywhere.

We were suing for $1800 to cover court costs and us both missing a day of work on top of the full security deposit.

In mediation we said we would settle for $1400, but she must have thought she was in the right

because she refused to offer a penny more than the original $700 check, which we never cashed.

When we got in front of the judge, it was pretty clear that she had no evidence, hadn't prepared anything, and just assumed that us "kids" would fall on our...

We put everything we had in front of the judge and made our claim (he was impressed).

He stopped us when we showed him the email to ask the landlord, "Did you really tell them to park wherever they wanted?"

When she said "yes", the judge replied "Then what are we even talking about?", and that was that.

Judgement in full for us, and that b__ch had to pay to re-sod her own damn lawn.

Next time you tell someone to "park wherever you want", you'd better mean it.

Or at least don't try to f__k someone over when they comply with what you said! If you made it this far, thanks for reading!

The landlord tried to spin routine parking into major lawn damage, deducting over half the deposit without solid proof. The OP’s side? They followed instructions, documented everything, and turned the landlord’s own email into slam-dunk evidence.

From the other angle, landlords often face real wear-and-tear costs or sneaky damage, and security deposits exist to cover legitimate repairs beyond normal use, like fixing big ruts or replacing ruined sod.

But here, the yard was already a mess, and the “damage” was minor at best. The landlord’s refusal to budge even in mediation suggests overconfidence or perhaps hoping young tenants would just let it go.

Broadening out, security deposit headaches are a widespread issue in renting. According to a Porch survey of landlords, they hold back an average of 36.1% of deposits collected, often for reasons ranging from cleaning to repairs, though many cases involve gray areas like normal wear versus damage. Tenants frequently feel shortchanged, especially without strong documentation.

Expert advice underscores preparation as key. As attorney Ann O’Connell explains, “A landlord has the right to use a tenant’s security deposit to cover unpaid rent and the cost of repairing any damage to the rental.” She stresses that deductions must be for actual damage, not routine upkeep, and tenants should document conditions with photos and checklists from move-in.

In disputes, thorough evidence often tips the scales in small claims court, where judges prioritize facts over assumptions. Neutral solutions? Always get permissions in writing, snap before-and-after pics, know your local laws and don’t hesitate to seek mediation or court if talks stall. It levels the playing field and often encourages fair play.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Some people share successfully fighting landlords stories over withheld security deposits by using evidence.

Disorderly_Chaos − My landlord tried to keep half our $1500 deposit because of some burn marks, a broken door, and some shades missing -

all of which I had taken pictures of when we moved in. All were pre-existing.

I told her (company) that if I didn’t see my entire deposit back by the 4th of the month

I was legally entitled to double that amount and I had lawyers on standby if they wanted to go to court over it. They paid.

Then I printed out copies of “The Landlord Tenant Act” which she had violated on several occasions (including not giving my full deposit back)

and distributed bound copies to every person living at every rental property I could find listings for. S__ew crappy landlords.

PabloPaniello − Yep, my last landlord tried to pocket the deposit - didn't even offer a pretense of a reason,

just told me she'd referred the matter to her legal counsel and we'd be hearing from him (we never did).

I assume the tactic was to make us thankful we weren't in legal trouble so we'd slink away and not cause problems, while she pocketed an extra grand without justification.

The thing is - I'm a lawyer at a very good firm, so it didn't go the way she planned.

In my state a landlord has to take certain steps in certain time periods if they'll not return the deposit. She didn't.

As I'd demanded my deposit back and she'd not complied with the statute I was entitled to return of my full deposit plus attorneys' fees and a penalty of several...

I composed a precise and damning demand letter to her and had my colleague finalize it, sign it, and send it.

A few days later my colleague received a sheepish call from her attorney asking if we'd drop everything in exchange for return of the full security deposit.

We said yes if they'd wire the money within 24 hours, else we were taking them to court. The money was in my account that afternoon.

I'm still annoyed when I think about that dishonest creep making me go through all that to get what was rightfully mine

(well, most of it - I'd rented the place furnished, so there were some small damages she legitimately could have claimed for;

but, pigs get fat while hogs get slaughtered, and instead of retaining $150 - 200, she tried to pocket the whole $1,000)

plz_understand − I once had a landlord who tried to keep our ENTIRE £2500 deposit for flooding damage

which she had refused to fix for months, and which SHE caused by deciding she could fix our broken washing machine herself

by forcefully pulling it out without disconnecting it from the water or turning the water off first.

If she'd been reasonable we probably would have agreed to let her keep some of it,

because we did break the bathroom sink (and then lived for months with the only source of water being the bathtub,

because she wouldn't replace the bathroom sink and also hadn't fixed the damage

she'd somehow done to the kitchen pipes in the washing machine debacle, rendering the kitchen sink also unusable).

But she wasn't reasonable, and two of my housemates were lawyers (which she knew)

so they filed against her, she just didn't turn up, and she had to pay us the full amount back.

Some people share stories of using documentation, receipts, or legal violations to counter landlords’ improper deposit deductions or charges.

The-disgracist − Had a rental with a missing screen door. Tried and tried to get them to come put one on, as agreed in the move in inspection.

We finally got fed up and went to the restore and installed one our selves.

Come move out, our dog has messed some of the screen up, they tried to charge us 300 to replace it.

Rolled up with my receipt from the store and a printout of all the emails asking for them to do it.

Took the screen door off, put it in a friends truck and went about our day. They dropped the additional charge

ilovecatsandcheese52 − I had a landlord once try to keep about £300 of my deposit to buy a new mattress because it was stained.

I knew it was horrible when I moved in (I had to flip it because of all the stains)

so I sweetly asked them to remind me which safe deposit scheme they put my deposit into,

knowing full well they hadn't used one and that was illegal. They returned my full deposit.

Others recount standing up to landlords by enforcing tenant rights.

wlwonderwoman − Fun story! My last Landlord attempted to show our basement suite off before we gave official notice that we were leaving, and without providing adequate notice herself.

This being very recent, so you know why we were so concerned- plus one of our roommates had a pre-existing condition.

We contacted the tenancy organization, and upon gaining the knowledge that we were fully within our rights to bar her entry,

we printed out a copy of the residential act and taped it to all the entry points.

We then proceeded to block the front door with the couch, just in case. She thought we were dumb students.

Unfortunately for her, we weren't- and we would have gone to court if she'd tried anything. Sucks to suck.

NovemberSaline − Where I live, it’s actually illegal to ask for security deposits (exactly because of things like this).

When my former partner and I went to sign a lease a couple years ago, we read through it and said,

“Yeah... we’re not paying that”. They were so confident and assumed we, young adults, would just fold. Yeah, no.

We had them alter and initial the lease right there. Gotta say, the looks on their faces was pretty priceless when we reminded them:

“You know this is illegal, right? It’s in the Landlord Tenant Act”.

We had already moved half our s__t in at that point so they clearly weren’t going to fight us on it.

It was at that moment I realized that it really does help to read up on your LOCAL landlord-tenant rights.

Please do yourself a favour and check out your local city guidelines! Given the kind of absentee landlords they turned out to be,

I have absolutely no doubt that we would have never seen that $500 bucks again.

Surely they had a plan to just make something up after we left. Know your rights!

Some express frustration that landlords treat deposits as bonuses and rely on tenants’ laziness or lack of evidence to keep money unjustly.

ThunderGunExpress- − To landlords, it seems the deposit has just become a bonus check in their eyes.

They can claim whatever they want and just keep it. And unless you took mad pictures before you moved in

and when you left you have no evidence to disprove their claim. And even if you did they make you take them to court to get it back.

A lot of people are too lazy and just say f__k it.

Others note minor or petty deductions from deposits that highlight landlord overreach.

proncesa − Damage deposits are such a racket. I've had good luck with almost all of mine,

but I do remember one time when I received an $18 deduction for a dirty oven handle. I always got a kick out of that, because

a) I did clean the oven handle, and

b) how do you calculate that's worth $18???

Some point out how landlords’ poor communication or arrogance led to their own losses.

weezzi − Her preferred means of communication ultimately became her downfall

Do you think the Redditor played it perfectly by going full prep-mode for court, or was the landlord’s bluff just too obvious? Have you ever had to fight for your deposit, or been tempted to let it slide? How far would you go to get back what’s yours? Drop your thoughts below!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jeffrey brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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