Landlord problem.. or Tenent problem...? ran wet in the sink over the frozen meat. come back and the...

ran wet in the sink over the frozen meat.
come back and the wet was adjectives over the floor, ruined the sink .

3 hours before, bumped into the sind, and disconnected the pipe, but i dont consider the pipe was connected appropriate, or secured...

is it my falt, or does the landlord involve to pay for the damages...?

he want to charge me for ruining the sink, and want me to pay packet for the sink...

should i , or should i sue for bad work on the sink and the ethnic group that put the pipe on the drain, ...?

its not my falt if its that easy to bump into the sink and disconnect the drain thats connected to the wall, is it...?

should i be blaimed, or should the proprietor for buying a house thats crappy, ...

o , yeah, and it leaks outside my door at the top of the stairs ...
right back you come up to my door, ...

idk, but what should i do...?

Pay for a new sink, and hold my dad look at it when he comes to pick me up for thankgiving weekend...?

fight fund and tell the tenant , about that how is it possibl
Answers:    Certainly you enjoy some level of duty and responsibility. A greater issue for you is that you state "SUE"??? You'd need verifiable proof that the initial install be faulty for one article; and the landlord would stipulation verfifiable proof of How you managed the smash up.

Neither is worth the energy; nor is it probable a resolution could be found in any concrete proof.

A suit against a innkeeper would probably be best served in a class motion involving other tenants surviving similar issues. Obviously you should check out local tenant/landlord rights and obligations. You might even travel so far as to check local code enforcement for various exterior issues; but surrounded by the end I suspect you'll own to bite the bullet and make the fixes.

All you mention would be so nebulous contained by court. Who could prove liability of either side? Who could describe "BUMPED"? Who might be involved in a suit for poor workmanship? indubitably not JUST the landlord.

Without knowing at adjectives of any lease agreement; or how many pieces of broadsheet you signed your name to; or what amount of payment deposit you settled on; or where you are; and the common situation in the conditions within the neighborhood; etc. etc. etc. I suggest CALM; RATIONAL; communication with the proprietor FIRST; in and attempt to describe those feelings; and negotiate.

Steven Wolf
check you local landlord-tenant law