Tenant Leaves Possessions behind
Where the tenant leaves possessions behind the Landlord has a duty of care to look after such. The Landlord must act reasonably and demonstrate the tenant had the opportunity to recover their goods prior to them being disposed off. A landlord cannot by law withhold another’s personal belongings in lieu of any monies owed, should they do so this is known as "Tort of conversion" this exposes the landlord to litigation for damages.
The worse case is you dispose of the goods and the tenant contacts you 3 months later and saying I need my possessions back - the Landlord says I have thrown them away. The next thing is the Tenant sues you for throwing away the family heirlooms worth an inflated £4,975. (These cases occur on a frequent basis and a classic setup)
Provided you have adhered to the tenancy agreement clause the Judge will (should) rule the tenant also has a "Duty of Care" to be responsible for their own possessions and they were negligent by their own actions not the Landlord.
Where this area does get very grey is
Abandonment for the Tenant state they had not vacated and were unlawfully evicted so removal of possessions was
unlawful.
Your tenancy agreement like ours should contain such a clause
When items are left at the premises, the Tenant will be responsible for meeting all
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