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Article 1: Purposes and Rules of Construction
Section 10. Purpose and Construction.
- (a) This chapter shall be liberally construed and applied to
promote its underlying purposes and policies.
(b) The underlying purposes and policies of this chapter are to
-
- (1) simplify, clarify, modernize, and revise the law governing
the rental of dwelling units and the rights and obligations of landlord
and tenant;
- (2) encourage landlord and tenant to maintain and improve the
quality of housing; and
- (3) make uniform the law among those states that enact it.
Article 2: Rental Agreements
Section 20. Terms and Conditions of Rental Agreement.
- (a) The landlord and tenant may include in a rental agreement
clauses and conditions not prohibited by this chapter or by law, including
rent, terms of agreement, and other provisions governing the rights and
obligations of the parties.
- (b) In the absence of agreement, the tenant shall pay as rent the
fair rental value for the use and occupancy of the dwelling unit.
- (c) Rent shall be payable without demand or notice at the time and
place agreed upon by the parties. Unless otherwise agreed, rent is payable
at the dwelling unit. Unless otherwise agreed, rent is payable at the
beginning of any term of one month or less and otherwise in equal monthly
installments. Unless otherwise agreed, rent shall be uniformly apportionable
from day to day and shall be paid on the date the periodic tenancy begins
and payable on or before the same date of each and every month thereafter
until the tenancy terminates.
- (d) Unless the rental agreement fixes a definite term, the tenancy
shall be week to week in the case of a tenant who pays weekly rent, and in
all other cases month to month.
- (e) If required by the landlord, the landlord and the tenant shall
include within the rental agreement, incorporate by reference in the rental
agreement, or add as a separate attachment to the rental agreement a
premises condition statement, setting out the condition of the premises,
including fixtures but excluding reference to any of the other contents of
the premises, and, if applicable, a contents inventory itemizing or
describing all of the furnishings and other contents of the premises and
specifying the condition of each of them. In the premises condition
statement and contents inventory, the parties shall describe the premises
and its contents at the commencement of the term of the period of the
occupancy covered by the rental agreement. When signed by the parties, the
premises condition statement and contents inventory completed under this
subsection become part of the rental agreement.
Article 2: Rental Agreements
Section 30. Effect of Unsigned or Undelivered Rental Agreement.
- (a) If the landlord does not sign and deliver a written rental
agreement signed and delivered to the landlord by the tenant, acceptance of
rent without reservation by the landlord gives the rental agreement the same
effect as if it had been signed and delivered by the landlord.
- (b) If the tenant does not sign and deliver a written rental
agreement signed and delivered to the tenant by the landlord, acceptance of
possession and payment of rent without reservation gives the rental
agreement the same effect as if it had been signed and delivered by the
tenant.
- (c) If a rental agreement given effect by the operation of this
section provides for a term longer than one year, it is effective only for
one year.
Article 2: Rental Agreements
Section 40. Prohibited Provisions in Rental Agreements.
- (a) A rental agreement may not provide that the tenant or landlord
- (1) agrees to waive or to forego rights or remedies under this
chapter;
- (2) authorizes a person to confess judgment on a claim arising
out of the rental agreement;
- (3) agrees to the exculpation or limitation of any liability of
the landlord or tenant arising under the law or to indemnify the landlord
or tenant for that liability or the costs connected with it;
- (4) agrees to pay the landlord's attorney fees.
- (b) A provision prohibited by (a) or (c) of this section included
in a rental agreement is unenforceable. If a landlord or tenant wilfully
uses a rental agreement containing provisions known by the person to be
prohibited, the other party may recover the amount of actual damages.
- (c) A rental agreement between a mobile home park operator and a
mobile home park tenant may not
- (1) deny a tenant of a mobile home park the right to sell the
tenant's mobile home within the park or require the resident or tenant to
remove the mobile home from the park solely on the basis of the sale of
the mobile home, nor may the mobile home park operator make a rule or
regulation to the same effect, except that, within 30 days of written
notice by the tenant of intent to sell the mobile home to a specified
buyer, the operator or owner of the mobile home park may refuse to allow a
sale for the following reasons:
- (A) the mobile home is in violation of laws or ordinances
relating to health, safety or welfare;
- (B) the proposed buyer refuses to assume the same terms as are
in the existing rental agreement; or
- (C) the proposed buyer does not have sufficient financial
responsibility;
- (2) require a tenant to provide permanent improvements that
become a part of the real property of the mobile home park owner or
operator as a condition of tenancy in the mobile home park; however, the
rental agreement may require the tenant to maintain existing conditions in
the park;
- (3) require payment of any type of vendor or transfer fee either
by a tenant in the mobile home park desiring to sell the tenant's mobile
home to another party or by any party desiring to purchase a mobile home
from a tenant in the park as a condition of tenancy; however, this
paragraph does not prevent the owner or operator from applying normal park
standards to prospective tenants before granting or denying tenancy or
from charging a reasonable vendor or transfer fee for services actually
performed if the tenant is notified in writing of the amount of those
charges before agreeing to move into the park; or
- (4) require the prospective tenant to pay a fee to enter the
mobile home park or a tenant to pay a fee to transfer the tenant's mobile
home to another location outside the park; however, this paragraph does
not prevent the owner or operator from charging a reasonable fee for
services actually performed and if the tenant is notified in writing of
the amount of those charges before agreeing to move into the park.
Article 2: Rental Agreements
Section 50. Separation of Rents and Obligations to Maintain Property
Forbidden
A rental agreement, assignment, conveyance, trust deed, or security
instrument may not permit the receipt of rent free of the obligation to comply
with Alaska Statute 34.03.100(a).
Article 2: Rental Agreements
Section 60. Sublease and Assignment
- (a) Unless otherwise agreed in writing, the tenant may not sublet
the premises or assign the rental agreement to another without the
landlord's consent.
- (b) The tenant's right to sublease the premises or assign the
rental agreement to another shall be conditioned on obtaining the landlord's
consent, which may be withheld only upon the grounds specified in (d) of
this section; no further restrictions on sublease or assignment are
enforceable.
- (c) When the rental agreement requires the landlord's consent for
sublease or assignment, the tenant may secure one or more persons who are
willing to occupy the premises. Each prospective occupant shall make a
written offer signed and delivered by the prospective occupant to the
landlord, containing the following information on the prospective occupant:
- (1) name, age, and present address;
- (2) marital status;
- (3) occupation, place of employment, and name and address of
employer;
- (4) number of all other persons who would normally reside with
the prospective occupant;
- (5) two credit references, or responsible persons who will
confirm the financial responsibility of the prospective occupant; and
- (6) names and addresses of all landlords of the prospective
occupant during the prior three years.
- (d) Within 14 days after the written offer has been delivered to
the landlord, the landlord may refuse consent to a sublease or assignment by
a written rejection signed and delivered by the landlord to the tenant,
containing one or more of the following reasonable grounds for rejecting the
prospective occupant:
- (1) insufficient credit standing or financial responsibility;
- (2) number of persons in the household;
- (3) number of persons under 18 years of age in the household;
- (4) unwillingness of the prospective occupant to assume the same
terms as are included in the existing rental agreement;
- (5) proposed maintenance of pets;
- (6) proposed commercial activity; or
- (7) written information signed by a previous landlord, which
shall accompany the rejection, setting out abuses of other premises
occupied by the prospective occupant.
- (e) In the event the written rejection fails to contain one or more
grounds permitted by (d) of this section for rejecting the prospective
occupant, the tenant may consider the landlord's consent given, or at the
tenant's option may terminate the rental agreement by a written notice given
without unnecessary delay to the landlord at least 30 days before the
termination date specified in the notice.
- (f) If the landlord does not deliver a written rejection signed by
the landlord to the tenant within 14 days after a written offer has been
delivered to the landlord by the tenant, the landlord's consent to the
sublease or assignment shall be conclusively presumed.
Article 3: Landlord Obligations
Section 70. Security Deposits and Prepaid Rent
- (a) A landlord may not demand or receive prepaid rent or a security
deposit, however denominated, in an amount or value in excess of two months'
periodic rent. This section does not apply to rental units where the rent
exceeds $2,000 a month.
- (b) Upon termination of the tenancy, property or money held by the
landlord as prepaid rent or as a security deposit may be applied to the
payment of accrued rent and the amount of damages that the landlord has
suffered by reason of the tenant's noncompliance with AS 34.03.120. The
accrued rent and damages must be itemized by the landlord in a written
notice mailed to the tenant's last known address within the time limit
prescribed by (g) of this section, together with the amount due the tenant.
In this subsection, "damages"
- (1) means deterioration of the premises and, if applicable, of
the contents of the premises;
- (2) does not include deterioration
- (A) that is the result of the tenant's use of the premises by
normal, nonabusive living;
- (B) caused by the landlord's failure to prepare for expected
conditions or by the landlord's failure to comply with an obligation of
the landlord imposed by this chapter.
- (c) All money paid to the landlord by the tenant as prepaid rent or
as a security deposit in a lease or rental agreement shall be promptly
deposited by the landlord, wherever practicable, in a trust account in a
bank, savings and loan association, or licensed escrow agent, and the
landlord shall provide to the tenant the terms and conditions under which
the prepaid rent or security deposit or portions of them may be withheld by
the landlord; nothing in this chapter prohibits the landlord from
commingling prepaid rents and security deposits in a single financial
account.
- (d) If the landlord wilfully fails to comply with (b) of this
section, the tenant may recover an amount not to exceed twice the actual
amount withheld.
- (e) This section does not preclude a landlord or tenant from
recovering other damages to which either may be entitled under this chapter.
- (f) The holder of the landlord's interest in the premises at the
time of the termination of the tenancy is bound by this section.
- (g) If the landlord or tenant gives notice that complies with AS
34.03.290, the landlord shall mail the written notice and refund required by
(b) of this section within 14 days after the tenancy is terminated and
possession is delivered by the tenant. If the tenant does not give notice
that complies with AS 34.03.290, the landlord shall mail the written notice
and refund required by (b) of this section within 30 days after the tenancy
is terminated, possession is delivered by the tenant, or the landlord
becomes aware that the dwelling unit is abandoned. If the landlord does not
know the mailing address of the tenant, but knows or has reason to know how
to contact the tenant to give the notice required by (b) of this section,
the landlord shall make a reasonable effort to deliver the notice and refund
to the tenant.
Article 3: Landlord Obligations
Section 80. Disclosure
- (a) The landlord or a person authorized to enter into a rental
agreement on behalf of the landlord shall disclose to the tenant in writing
at or before the commencement of the tenancy the name and address of
- (1) the person authorized to manage the premises; and
- (2) an owner of the premises or a person authorized to act for
and on behalf of the owner for the purpose of service of process and for
the purpose of receiving and receipting for notices and demands.
- (b) The information required to be furnished by this section shall
be kept current and this section extends to and is enforceable against any
successor landlord, owner, or manager.
- (c) A person who fails to comply with (a) of this section becomes
an agent of each person who is a landlord for the purpose of
- (1) service of process and receiving and receipting for notices
and demands; and
- (2) performing the obligations of the landlord under this chapter
and under the rental agreement and expending or making available for the
purpose all rent collected from the premises.
- (d) A mobile home park operator shall disclose fully in writing all
capital improvements that will be required to be made by the tenant
including but not limited to skirting or utility hook-ups, before entering
into a rental agreement.
Article 3: Landlord Obligations
Section 90. Landlord to Supply Possession of the Dwelling Unit
- (a) At the commencement of the term the landlord shall deliver
possession of the premises to the tenant in compliance with the rental
agreement and AS 34.03.100. The landlord may, after serving a notice to quit
under AS 09.45.100 - 09.45.105 to a person who is wrongfully in possession,
- (1) bring an action for possession against any person wrongfully
in possession; and
- (2) recover the damages provided in AS 34.03.290.
- (b) As a condition of delivery of possession of the premises to the
tenant, the landlord may require the tenant to acknowledge or verify by the
tenant's signature the accuracy of the premises condition statement and
contents inventory prepared under AS 34.03.020(e). Before requiring the
tenant's signature, the landlord shall first advise the tenant that the
premises condition statement and contents inventory
- (1) may be used by the landlord as the basis
- (A) to determine whether prepaid rent or a security deposit
shall be applied to the payment of damages to the premises when
authorized by AS 34.03.070(b); and
- (B) to compute the recovery of other damages to which the
parties may be entitled under this chapter; and
- (2) is, in an action initiated by a party to recover damages or
to obtain other relief to which a party may be entitled under this
chapter, presumptive evidence of the condition of the premises and its
contents at the commencement of the term of the period of occupancy
covered by the rental agreement.
Article 3: Landlord Obligations
Section 100. Landlord to Maintain Fit Premises
- (a) The landlord shall
- (1) make all repairs and do whatever is necessary to put and keep
the premises in a fit and habitable condition;
- (2) keep all common areas of the premises in a clean and safe
condition;
- (3) maintain in good and safe working order and condition all
electrical, plumbing, sanitary, heating, ventilating, air-conditioning,
kitchen, and other facilities and appliances, including elevators,
supplied or required to be supplied by the landlord;
- (4) provide and maintain appropriate receptacles and conveniences
for the removal of ashes, garbage, rubbish, and other waste incidental to
the occupancy of the dwelling unit and arrange for their removal;
- (5) supply running water and reasonable amounts of hot water and
heat at all times, insofar as energy conditions permit, except where the
building that includes the dwelling unit is so constructed that heat or
hot water is generated by an installation within the exclusive control of
the tenant and supplied by a direct public utility connection;
- (6) if requested by the tenant, provide and maintain locks and
furnish keys reasonably adequate to ensure safety to the tenant's person
and property; and
- (7) provide smoke detection devices as required under AS
18.70.095.
- (b) A landlord of a single family residence located in an
undeveloped rural area or located where public sewer or water service has
never been connected is not liable for a breach of (a)(3) or (5) of this
section if the dwelling unit at the beginning of the rental agreement did
not have running water, hot water, sewage, or sanitary facilities from a
private system.
- (c) The landlord and tenant of a one- or two-family residence may
agree in writing that the tenant perform the landlord's duties specified in
(a)(4), (5), (6), and (7) of this section. A tenant may agree to perform the
duties specified in (a)(3) of this section in rental units where the rent
exceeds $2,000 a month. They may also agree in writing that the tenant
perform specified repairs, maintenance tasks, alterations, and remodeling,
but the tenant may not agree to maintain elevators in good and safe working
order. Agreements are allowed under this subsection only if the transaction
is entered into in good faith and not for the purpose of evading the
obligations of the landlord.
- (d) The landlord and tenant of a dwelling unit other than a single
family residence may agree that the tenant is to perform specified repairs,
maintenance tasks, alterations, or remodeling only if
- (1) the agreement of the parties is entered into in good faith
and not for the purpose of evading the obligations of the landlord and is
set out in a separate writing signed by the parties and supported by
adequate consideration; and
- (2) the agreement does not diminish or affect the obligation of
the landlord to other tenants in the premises.
- (e) The landlord may not treat performance of a separate agreement
described in (d) of this section as a condition to an obligation or
performance of a rental agreement.
Article 3: Landlord Obligations
Section 110. Limitation of Liability.
- (a) Unless otherwise agreed, a landlord who conveys premises that
include a dwelling unit subject to a rental agreement in a good faith sale
to a bona fide purchaser is relieved of liability under the rental agreement
and this chapter as to events occurring subsequent to written notice to the
tenant of the conveyance. However,
- (1) the landlord remains liable to the tenant for the property
and money to which the tenant is entitled under AS 34.03.070, unless the
property and money are specifically assigned to and accepted by the
purchaser; and
- (2) the provisions of
- (A) a premises condition statement prepared under AS
34.03.020(e) between the landlord and the tenant remains valid as
between the purchaser and the tenant until a new premises condition
statement is entered into between the purchaser and the tenant; and
- (B) a contents inventory prepared under AS 34.03.020(e) between
the landlord and the tenant remains valid as between the purchaser and
the tenant for the contents remaining on the premises after the
conveyance of the premises until a new contents inventory is entered
into between the purchaser and the tenant.
- (b) Unless otherwise agreed, a manager of premises that include a
dwelling unit is relieved of liability under the rental agreement and this
chapter as to events occurring after written notice to the tenant of the
termination of the person's management.
Article 3: Landlord Obligations
Section 115. Renumbered as AS 34.05.025.
Repealed or Renumbered
Article 4: Tenant Obligations
Section 120. Tenant Obligations.
- (a) The tenant
- (1) shall keep that part of the premises occupied and used by the
tenant as clean and safe as the condition of the premises permit;
- (2) shall dispose all ashes, rubbish, garbage, and other waste
from the dwelling unit in a clean and safe manner;
- (3) shall keep all plumbing fixtures in the dwelling unit or used
by the tenant as clean as their condition permits;
- (4) shall use in a reasonable manner all electrical, plumbing,
sanitary, heating, ventilating, air-conditioning, kitchen, and other
facilities and appliances including elevators in the premises;
- (5) may not deliberately or negligently destroy, deface, damage,
impair, or remove a part of the premises or knowingly permit any person to
do so;
- (6) may not unreasonably disturb, or permit others on the
premises with the tenant's consent to unreasonably disturb, a neighbor's
peaceful enjoyment of the premises;
- (7) shall maintain smoke detection devices as required under AS
18.70.095; and
- (8) may not, except in an emergency when the landlord cannot be
contacted after reasonable effort to do so, change the locks on doors of
the premises without first securing the written agreement of the landlord
and, immediately after changing the locks, providing the landlord a set of
keys to all doors for which locks have been changed; in an emergency, the
tenant may change the locks and shall, within five days, provide the
landlord a set of keys to all doors for which locks have been changed and
written notice of the change.
- (b) The tenant may not knowingly engage at the premises in
prostitution, an illegal activity involving a place of prostitution, an
illegal activity involving alcoholic beverages, an illegal activity
involving gambling or promoting gambling, an illegal activity involving a
controlled substance, or an illegal activity involving an imitation
controlled substance, or knowingly permit others in the premises to engage
in one or more of those activities at the rental premises.
Article 4: Tenant Obligations
Section 130. Rules and Regulations.
- (a) A landlord may adopt rules and regulations, which shall be
posted prominently on the premises, concerning the tenant's use and
occupancy of the premises. A rule or regulation is enforceable against the
tenant only if
- (1) its purpose is to promote the convenience, safety, health, or
welfare of the tenants in the premises, preserve the landlord's property
from abusive use, or make a fair distribution of services and facilities
held out for the tenants generally;
- (2) it is reasonably related to the purpose for which it is
adopted;
- (3) it applies to all tenants in the premises in a fair manner;
- (4) it is sufficiently explicit in its prohibition, direction, or
limitation of the tenant's conduct to fairly inform the tenant of what the
tenant must or must not do to comply;
- (5) it is not for the purpose of evading the obligations of the
landlord; and
- (6) the tenant has notice of it at the time the tenant enters
into the rental agreement.
- (b) A rule or regulation adopted after the tenant enters into the
rental agreement is enforceable against the tenant if reasonable notice of
its adoption is given to the tenant and it does not work a substantial
modification of the rental agreement.
- (c) A mobile home park operator may determine by rule or regulation
the style or quality of the equipment, including but not limited to
underskirting and tie-downs, to be purchased by the tenant from the vendor
of the tenant's choice; however, the operator may not require that the
equipment be purchased from the operator.
Article 4: Tenant Obligations
Section 140. Access.
- (a) The tenant may not unreasonably withhold consent to the
landlord to enter into the dwelling unit in order to inspect the premises,
make necessary or agreed repairs, decorations, alterations, or improvements,
supply necessary or agreed services, remove personal property belonging to
the landlord that is not covered by a written rental agreement, or exhibit
the dwelling unit to prospective or actual purchasers, mortgagees, tenants,
workers, or contractors.
- (b) The landlord may enter the dwelling unit without the consent of
the tenant in the case of emergency.
- (c) A landlord may not abuse the right of access or use it to
harass the tenant. Except in case of emergency or if it is impracticable to
do so, the landlord shall give the tenant at least 24 hours notice of
intention to enter and may enter only at reasonable times and with the
tenant's consent.
- (d) The landlord does not have a right of access to the dwelling
unit
- (1) except
- (A) as permitted by this section;
- (B) by court order; or
- (C) as permitted by AS 34.03.230(b); or
- (2) unless the tenant has abandoned or surrendered the premises.
Article 4: Tenant Obligations
Section 150. Tenant to Use and Occupy.
Unless otherwise agreed, the tenant shall occupy the dwelling unit only as a
dwelling unit. The rental agreement shall require that the tenant notify the
landlord of an anticipated extended absence from the premises in excess of seven
days; however, the notice shall be given as soon as reasonably possible after
the tenant knows the absence will exceed seven days.
Article 5: Tenant Remedies
Section 160. Noncompliance By the Landlord: General.
- (a) Except as provided in this chapter, if there is a material
noncompliance by the landlord with the rental agreement or a noncompliance
with AS 34.03.100 materially affecting health and safety, the tenant may
deliver a written notice to the landlord specifying the acts and omissions
constituting the breach and specifying that the rental agreement will
terminate upon a date not less than 20 days after receipt of the notice if
the breach is not remedied in 10 days, and the rental agreement shall
terminate as provided in the notice subject to the provisions of this
section. If the breach is remediable by repairs or the payment of damages or
otherwise, and the landlord remedies the breach before the date specified in
the notice, the rental agreement will not terminate. In the absence of due
care by the landlord, if substantially the same act or omission that
constituted a prior noncompliance of which notice was given recurs within
six months, the tenant may terminate the rental agreement upon at least 10
days written notice specifying the breach and the date of termination of the
rental agreement. The tenant may not terminate for a condition caused by the
deliberate or negligent act or omission of the tenant, a member of the
tenant's family, or other person on the premises with the tenant's consent.
- (b) Except as provided in this chapter, the tenant may recover
damages and obtain injunctive relief for any noncompliance by the landlord
with the rental agreement or AS 34.03.100, 34.03.210, or 34.03.280.
- (c) The remedy provided in (b) of this section is in addition to a
right of the tenant under (a) of this section.
- (d) If the rental agreement is terminated, the landlord shall
return all prepaid rent or security deposits recoverable by the tenant under
AS 34.03.070.
Article 5: Tenant Remedies
Section 170. Failure to Deliver Possession.
- (a) If the landlord fails to deliver possession of the dwelling
unit to the tenant as provided in AS 34.03.090, rent abates until possession
is delivered and the tenant may
- (1) upon at least 10 days written notice to the landlord
terminate the rental agreement and upon termination the landlord shall
return all prepaid rent and security deposits; or
- (2) demand performance of the rental agreement by the landlord
and if the tenant elects, maintain an action for possession of the
dwelling unit against the landlord and any person wrongfully in possession
and recover the damages sustained.
- (b) If a person's failure to deliver possession is willful and not
in good faith, an aggrieved tenant may recover from that person an amount
not to exceed one and one-half times the actual damages.
Article 5: Tenant Remedies
Section 180. Wrongful Failure to Supply Heat, Water, Hot Water or Essential
Services.
- (a) If, contrary to the rental agreement or AS 34.03.100, the
landlord deliberately or negligently fails to supply running water, hot
water, heat, sanitary facilities, or other essential services, the tenant
may give written notice to the landlord specifying the breach and may
immediately
- (1) procure reasonable amounts of hot water, running water, heat,
sanitary facilities, and essential services during the period of the
landlord's noncompliance and deduct their actual and reasonable cost from
the rent;
- (2) recover damages based on the diminution in the fair rental
value of the dwelling unit; or
- (3) procure reasonable substitute housing during the period of
the landlord's noncompliance, in which case the tenant is excused from
paying rent for the period of the landlord's noncompliance and, in
addition, may recover the amount by which the actual and reasonable cost
exceeds rent.
- (b) A tenant who proceeds under this section may not proceed under
AS 34.03.160 as to that breach.
- (c) Rights do not arise under this section until the tenant has
given written notice to the landlord. Rights do not arise under this section
if the condition was caused by the deliberate or negligent act or omission
of the tenant, a member of the tenant's family, or other person on the
premises with the tenant's consent.
Article 5: Tenant Remedies
Section 190. Landlord's Noncompliance as Defense to Action For Possession or
Rent.
- (a) In an action for possession based upon nonpayment of the rent
or in an action for rent when the tenant is in possession, the tenant may
counterclaim for any amount recoverable under the rental agreement or this
chapter. If a counterclaim is made, the court shall determine whether the
defense is supported by the evidence and, if so, may order that
- (1) the periodic rent is to be reduced to reflect the diminution
in value of the dwelling unit during the period of noncompliance;
- (2) the action be continued for a reasonable time to enable the
landlord to cure the violation;
- (3) the tenant pay into court all or part of the rent accrued and
thereafter accruing; if the violations have not been cured within six
months, the court shall enter judgment for the defendant and either refund
to the defendant all money deposited or use the money for the purpose of
making the dwelling fit for human habitation; if the violations have been
cured, the court shall determine the amount due to each party; the party
to whom a net amount is owed shall be paid first from the money paid into
the court, and the balance by the other party; if no rent remains due
after application of this section, judgment shall be entered for the
tenant in the action for possession;
- (4) the tenant vacate the dwelling during the making of necessary
repairs, when the repairs cannot be made without vacation of the premises,
the tenant to be reinstated upon completion of the repairs.
- (b) In an action for rent where the tenant is not in possession,
the tenant may counterclaim as provided in (a) of this section but the
tenant is not required to pay rent into court.
Article 5: Tenant Remedies
Section 200. Fire or Casualty Damage.
- (a) If the dwelling unit or premises are damaged or destroyed by
fire or casualty to the extent that enjoyment of the dwelling unit is
substantially impaired, the tenant shall
- (1) immediately vacate the premises and notify the landlord of
the intention to terminate the rental agreement, in which case the rental
agreement terminates as of the date of vacating; or
- (2) if continued occupancy is lawful, vacate the part of the
dwelling unit rendered unusable by the fire or casualty, in which case the
tenant's liability for rent is reduced in proportion to the diminution in
the fair rental value of the dwelling unit.
- (b) If the rental agreement is terminated, the landlord shall
return all prepaid rent and security deposits recoverable under AS
34.03.070. Accounting for rent in the event of termination or apportionment
shall occur as of the date of the casualty.
Article 5: Tenant Remedies
Section 210. Tenant's Remedies For Landlord's Unlawful Ouster, Exclusion, or
Diminution of Service.
If the landlord unlawfully removes or excludes the tenant from the premises
or wilfully diminishes services to the tenant by interrupting or causing the
interruption of electric, gas, water, sanitary, or other essential service to
the tenant, the tenant may recover possession or terminate the rental agreement
and, in either case, recover an amount not to exceed one and one- half times the
actual damages. If the rental agreement is terminated, the landlord shall return
all prepaid rent and security deposits recoverable by the tenant under AS
34.03.070.
Article 6: Landlord Remedies
Section 220. Noncompliance With Rental Agreement: Failure to Pay Rent.
- (a) Except as provided in this chapter,
- (1) if the tenant or someone in the tenant's control deliberately
inflicts substantial damage to the premises in breach of AS
34.03.120(a)(5), the landlord may deliver a written notice to quit to the
tenant under AS 09.45.100 - 09.45.105 specifying the act constituting the
breach and specifying that the rental agreement will terminate upon a date
that is not less than 24 hours after service of the notice; for purposes
of this paragraph, damage to premises is "substantial" if the
loss, destruction, or defacement of property attributable to the
deliberate infliction of damage to the premises exceeds $400;
- (2) if there is a material noncompliance by the tenant with the
rental agreement, or if there is noncompliance with AS 34.03.120, other
than deliberate infliction of substantial damage to the premises or other
than noncompliance as to a utility service for which the provisions of (e)
of this section apply, materially affecting health and safety, the
landlord may deliver a written notice to quit to the tenant under AS
09.45.100 - 09.45.110 specifying the acts and omissions constituting the
breach and specifying that the rental agreement will terminate upon a date
not less than 10 days after service of the notice; if the breach is not
remedied, the rental agreement terminates as provided in the notice
subject to the provisions of this section; if the breach is remediable by
repairs or the payment of damages or otherwise and the tenant adequately
remedies the breach before the date specified in the notice, the rental
agreement will not terminate; in the absence of due care by the tenant, if
substantially the same act or omission that constituted a prior
noncompliance of which notice was given recurs within six months, the
landlord may terminate the rental agreement upon at least five days
written notice to quit specifying the breach and the date of termination
of the rental agreement.
- (b) If rent is unpaid when due and the tenant fails to pay rent in
full within seven days after written notice by the landlord of nonpayment
and the intention to terminate the rental agreement if the rent is not paid
within that period of time, the tenancy terminates unless the landlord
agrees to allow the tenant to remain in occupancy, and the landlord may
terminate the rental agreement and immediately recover possession of the
rental unit. Only one written notice of default need be given the tenant by
the landlord as to any one default. A landlord who has given written notice
to the tenant under this subsection may accept a partial payment of the rent
due under the rental agreement and extend the date for the eviction
accordingly.
- (c) Except as provided in this chapter, the landlord may recover
actual damages and obtain injunctive relief for any noncompliance by the
tenant with the rental agreement or AS 34.03.120.
- (d) An order of abatement entered by a court under AS 09.50.170
terminates a rental agreement on the premises subject to the order of
abatement.
- (e) If a public utility providing electricity, natural gas, or
water to the premises occupied by the tenant discontinues the service to the
premises due to the failure of the tenant to pay for the utility service,
the landlord may deliver a written notice to quit to the tenant advising
that, notwithstanding (a) of this section, the tenancy will terminate five
days after the landlord's service of the notice. If, within three days from
the service of the notice, the tenant reinstates the discontinued service
and repays the landlord for any amounts paid by the landlord to reinstate
service, and if damage did not occur to the rental unit as a result of the
discontinuance of service, the rental agreement will not terminate. However,
in the absence of due care by the tenant, if substantially the same act or
omission that constituted a prior noncompliance under this subsection for
which notice was given recurs within six months, the landlord may terminate
the rental agreement upon at least three days' written notice specifying the
breach and the date of termination of the rental agreement.
- (f) A person whose use of premises is based solely on rights
acquired by a tenant, and who has not individually acquired the rights of a
tenant under this chapter, does not acquire rights under this chapter as a
result of being present on the premises.
Article 6: Landlord Remedies
Section 225. Limitations On Mobile Home Park
Operator's Right to Terminate.
- (a) A mobile home park operator may evict a mobile home or a mobile
home park dweller or tenant only for one of the following reasons:
- (1) the mobile home dweller or tenant has defaulted in the
payment of rent owed;
- (2) the mobile home dweller or tenant has been convicted of
violating a federal or state law or local ordinance, and that violation is
continuing and is detrimental to the health, safety, or welfare of other
dwellers or tenants in the mobile home park;
- (3) the mobile home dweller or tenant has violated a provision,
enforceable under AS 34.03.130, of the rental agreement or lease signed by
both parties and not prohibited by law including rent and the terms of
agreement; and
- (4) a change in the use of the land comprising the mobile home
park, or the portion of it on which the mobile home to be evicted is
located; however, all dwellers or tenants so affected by a change in land
use shall be given at least 180 days' notice, or longer if a longer notice
period is provided in a valid lease.
- (b) A mobile home park operator may not evict a mobile home or a
mobile home park dweller or tenant because of the age of the mobile home,
except that a mobile home or a mobile home park dweller or tenant may be
evicted if, when the mobile home was admitted to the mobile home park, a
regulation of the mobile home park limiting the age of a mobile home in the
mobile home park was in effect, the mobile home is sold after the age
limitation has been exceeded, and the owner or tenant of the mobile home has
failed to bring the unit into compliance with the life safety requirements
of 24 CFR Part 3280. This does not prohibit eviction for violation of a
provision enforceable under AS 34.03.130 that requires that a mobile home be
in a fit and habitable condition.
- (c) When, under (a) of this section, a mobile home park owner is
required to give notice to evict a mobile home owner or a mobile home park
dweller or tenant, provision of notice to quit under AS 09.45.100 -
09.45.105 satisfies the requirement of notice.
Article 6: Landlord Remedies
Section 230. Remedies For Absence, Nonuse and Abandonment.
- (a) When the rental agreement requires the tenant to give notice to
the landlord of an anticipated extended absence in excess of seven days as
required in AS 34.03.150 and the tenant wilfully fails to do so, the
landlord may recover an amount not to exceed one and one-half times the
actual damages.
- (b) During an absence of the tenant in excess of seven days, the
landlord may enter the dwelling unit at times reasonably necessary as
provided in AS 34.03.140. The landlord may reenter the dwelling unit and, if
there is evidence that the tenant has abandoned the dwelling unit, unless
the landlord and tenant have made a specific agreement to the contrary, the
landlord may terminate the rental agreement.
- (c) If the tenant abandons the dwelling unit, the landlord shall
make reasonable efforts to rent it at a fair rental value. If the landlord
rents the dwelling unit for a term beginning before the expiration of the
rental agreement, the agreement is considered terminated on the date the new
tenancy begins. The rental agreement is considered terminated by the
landlord on the date the landlord has notice of the abandonment if the
landlord fails to use reasonable efforts to rent the dwelling unit at a fair
rental value or if the landlord accepts the abandonment as a surrender. If
the tenancy is from month to month, or week to week, the term of the rental
agreement for purposes of this section shall be considered a month or a
week, as the case may be.
Article 6: Landlord Remedies
Section 240. Waiver of Landlord's Right to Terminate.
Acceptance of rent with knowledge of a default by the tenant or acceptance of
performance by the tenant that varies from the terms of the rental agreement or
rules or regulations subsequently adopted by the landlord constitutes a waiver
of the right of the landlord to terminate the rental agreement for that breach,
unless otherwise agreed after the breach has occurred.
Article 6: Landlord Remedies
Section 250. Landlord Liens; Distraint For Rent Abolished.
- (a) A lien or security interest on behalf of the landlord in the
tenant's household goods is not enforceable unless perfected before March
19, 1974.
- (b) Distraint for rent is abolished.
Article 6: Landlord Remedies
Section 260. Disposition of Abandoned Property.
- (a) Except as otherwise agreed, if, upon termination of a tenancy
including but not limited to a termination after expiration of a lease or by
surrender or abandonment of the premises, a tenant has left personal
property upon the premises, and the landlord reasonably believes that the
tenant has abandoned this personal property, the landlord may
- (1) give notice to the tenant demanding that the property be
removed within the dates set out in the notice but not less than 15 days
after delivery or mailing of the notice, and that if the property is not
removed within the time specified, the property may be sold; if the
property is not removed within the time specified in the notice, the
landlord may sell the property at a public sale; the landlord may dispose
of perishable commodities in any manner the landlord considers fit;
- (2) if the tenant has left personal property that is reasonably
determined by the landlord to be valueless or of such little value that
the cost of storing and conducting a public sale would probably exceed the
amount that would be realized from the sale, the landlord may notify the
tenant that the property be removed within the date specified in the
notice but not less than 15 days after delivery or mailing of the notice,
and that if the property is not removed within the time specified, the
landlord intends to destroy or otherwise dispose of the property; if the
property is not removed within the time specified in the notice, the
landlord may destroy or otherwise dispose of the property; in the notice,
the landlord shall indicate an election to sell certain items of the
tenant's personal property at public sale and to destroy or otherwise
dispose of the remainder.
- (b) After notice as provided in (a) of this section, the landlord
shall store all personal property of the tenant in a place of safekeeping
and shall exercise reasonable care of the property, but is not responsible
to the tenant for loss not caused by the landlord's deliberate or negligent
act. The landlord may elect to store the property on the premises previously
demised, in which event the storage cost may not exceed the fair rental
value of the premises. If the tenant's property is removed to a commercial
storage company, the storage cost shall include the actual charge for the
storage and removal from the premises to the place of storage.
- (c) After landlord's notice under (a) of this section, or
otherwise, if the tenant makes timely response in writing of an intention to
remove the personal property from the premises and does not do so within the
time specified in the landlord's notice or within 15 days of the delivery or
mailing of the tenant's written response whichever is later, it shall be
conclusively presumed that the tenant has abandoned the property. If the
tenant removes the property after notice, the landlord is entitled to the
cost of storage for the period the property has remained in the landlord's
safekeeping.
- (d) The landlord is not liable in damages in an action by a tenant
claiming loss by reason of the landlord's storage, destruction, or
disposition of property under this section. A landlord who deliberately or
negligently violates the provisions of this section is liable for actual
damages and penal damages of an amount not to exceed actual damages.
- (e) A public sale authorized under this section shall be conducted
under AS 09.35.140. The landlord may dispose of any property upon which no
bid is made at the public sale.
Article 6: Landlord Remedies
Section 270. Remedy After Termination.
If the rental agreement is terminated, the landlord may have a claim for
possession and for rent and a separate claim for actual damages for breach of
the rental agreement.
Article 6: Landlord Remedies
Section 280. Recovery of Possession Limited.
A landlord may not recover or take possession of the dwelling unit by action
or otherwise, including wilful diminution of services to the tenant by
interrupting or causing the interruption of electricity, gas, water, sanitary,
or other essential services to the tenant, except in case of abandonment,
surrender, circumstances beyond the control of the landlord due to energy
conditions, or as permitted in this chapter.
Article 6: Landlord Remedies
Section 285. Service of Process Upon Tenant.
In an action for possession under this chapter, the summons and complaint
shall be served under the provisions of Rule No. 85 of the Rules of Civil
Procedure. A continuance may not be granted plaintiff or defendant except for
good cause shown.
Article 7: Periodic Tenancy, Holdover, and Abuse of Access
Section 290. Periodic Tenancy and Holdover.
- (a) While rent is current, the landlord or the tenant may terminate
a week to week tenancy by a written notice given to the other at least 14
days before the termination date specified in the notice.
- (b) The landlord or the tenant may terminate a month to month
tenancy by a written notice given to the other at least 30 days before the
rental due date specified in the notice.
- (c) If the tenant remains in possession without the landlord's
consent after expiration of the term of the rental agreement or after its
termination under (a) or (b) of this section, the landlord may, after
serving a notice to quit to the tenant under AS 09.45.100 - 09.45.105, bring
an action for possession and if the tenant's holdover is wilful and not in
good faith the landlord, in addition, may recover an amount not to exceed
one and one-half times the actual damages. If the landlord consents to the
tenant's continued occupancy, AS 34.03.020 applies.
Article 7: Periodic Tenancy, Holdover, and Abuse of Access
Section 300. Landlord and Tenant Remedies For Abuse of Access.
- (a) If the tenant refuses to allow lawful access, the landlord may
obtain injunctive relief to compel access or terminate the rental agreement.
In either case, the landlord may recover an amount not to exceed the actual
damages or one month's periodic rent, whichever is greater. If the landlord
terminates the rental agreement, the landlord shall give written notice to
the tenant at least 10 days before the date specified in the notice.
- (b) If the landlord makes an unlawful entry or a lawful entry in an
unreasonable manner or makes repeated demands for entry otherwise lawful but
which have the effect of unreasonably harassing the tenant, the tenant may
obtain injunctive relief to prevent the recurrence of the conduct or
terminate the rental agreement. In either case, the tenant may recover an
amount not to exceed the actual damages or one month's periodic rent,
whichever is greater, court costs and reasonable attorney fees. If the
tenant terminates the rental agreement, the tenant shall give written notice
to the landlord at least 10 days before the date specified in the notice.
Article 8: Retaliatory Action
Section 310. Retaliatory Conduct Prohibited.
- (a) Except as provided in (c) and (d) of this section, a landlord
may not retaliate by increasing rent or decreasing services or by bringing
or threatening to bring an action for possession after the tenant has
- (1) complained to the landlord of a violation of AS 34.03.100;
- (2) sought to enforce rights and remedies granted the tenant
under this chapter;
- (3) organized or become a member of a tenant's union or similar
organization; or
- (4) complained to a governmental agency responsible for
enforcement of governmental housing, wage, price, or rent controls.
- (b) If the landlord acts in violation of (a) of this section, the
tenant is entitled to the remedies provided in AS 34.03.210 and has a
defense in an action against the tenant for possession.
- (c) Notwithstanding (a) and (b) of this section, after serving a
notice to quit to the tenant under AS 09.45.100 - 09.45.105, a landlord may
bring an action for possession if
- (1) the tenant is in default in rent;
- (2) compliance with the applicable building or housing code
requires alteration, remodeling, or demolition that would effectively
deprive the tenant of use of the dwelling unit;
- (3) the tenant is committing waste or a nuisance, or is using the
dwelling unit for an illegal purpose or for other than living or dwelling
purposes in violation of the rental agreement;
- (4) the landlord seeks in good faith to recover possession of the
dwelling unit for personal purposes;
- (5) the landlord seeks in good faith to recover possession of the
dwelling unit for the purpose of substantially altering, remodeling, or
demolishing the premises;
- (6) the landlord seeks in good faith to recover possession of the
dwelling unit for the purpose of immediately terminating for at least six
months use of the dwelling unit as a dwelling unit; or
- (7) the landlord has in good faith contracted to sell the
property, and the contract of sale contains a representation by the
purchaser corresponding to (4), (5) or (6) of this subsection.
- (d) Notwithstanding (a) of this section, the landlord may increase
the rent if the landlord
- (1) has become liable for a substantial increase in property
taxes, or a substantial increase in other maintenance or operating costs
not associated with compliance with the complaint or request, not less
than four months before the demand for an increase in rent; and the
increase in rent bears a reasonable relationship to the net increase in
taxes or costs;
- (2) has completed a capital improvement of the dwelling unit or
the property of which it is a part and the increase in rent does not
exceed the amount that may be claimed for federal income tax purposes as a
straight-line depreciation of the improvement, prorated among the dwelling
units benefited by the improvement;
- (3) can establish by competent evidence that the rent now
demanded of the tenant does not exceed the rent charged other tenants of
similar dwelling units in the building or, in the case of a single-family
residence or if there is no similar dwelling unit in the building, does
not exceed the fair rental value of the dwelling unit.
- (e) Maintenance of the action under (c) of this section does not
release the landlord from liability under AS 34.03.160(b).
Article 9: General Provisions
Section 320. Obligation of Good Faith.
Every duty under this chapter and every act that must be performed as a
condition precedent to the exercise of a right or remedy under this chapter
imposes an obligation of good faith in its performance or enforcement. The
aggrieved party has a duty to mitigate damages.
Article 9: General Provisions
Section 330. Application and Exclusions.
- (a) This chapter applies to and determines rights, obligations and
remedies under a rental agreement, wherever made, for a dwelling unit in
this state.
- (b) Unless created to avoid the application of this chapter, the
following arrangements are not governed by this chapter:
- (1) residence at an institution, public or private, if incidental
to detention or the provision of medical, geriatric, educational,
counseling, religious, or similar services;
- (2) occupancy under a contract of sale of a dwelling unit or the
property of which it is a part if the occupant is the purchaser or a
person who succeeds to the interest of a purchaser;
- (3) occupancy by a member of a fraternal or social organization
in the portion of a structure operated for the benefit of the
organization;
- (4) transient occupancy in a hotel, motel, lodgings, or other
transient facility;
- (5) occupancy by an employee of a landlord whose right to
occupancy is conditioned upon employment substantially for services,
maintenance, or repair to the premises;
- (6) occupancy by an owner of a condominium unit or a holder of a
proprietary lease in a cooperative;
- (7) occupancy under a rental agreement covering premises used by
the occupant primarily for agricultural purposes;
- (8) occupancy under a rental agreement covering premises used as
part of a transitional or supportive housing program that is sponsored or
operated by a public corporation or by a nonprofit corporation and that
provides shelter and related support services intended to improve the
occupant's opportunity to obtain permanent housing.
Article 9: General Provisions
Section 335. Proof of Certain Property Damage Claims.
In an action initiated by a party to recover damages or to obtain other
relief to which a party may be entitled under this chapter, a premises condition
statement and contents inventory prepared under AS 34.03.020(e) is presumptive
evidence of the condition of the premises and its contents at the commencement
of the term of the period of occupancy covered by the rental agreement between
the parties. Unless its authenticity is rebutted by clear and convincing
evidence by the party against whom the statement and contents inventory is
offered, the statement and contents inventory may be offered by a party, without
additional supporting evidence, as the basis on which to compute the recovery of
damages to which the party may be entitled under this chapter.
Article 9: General Provisions
Section 340. Service of Process.
If a landlord is not a resident of this state or is a corporation not
authorized to do business in this state and engages in any conduct in this state
governed by this chapter, or engages in a transaction subject to this chapter,
the landlord may designate an agent upon whom service of process may be made in
this state. The agent shall be a resident of this state or a corporation
authorized to do business in this state. The agent shall be the same person
designated under AS 34.03.080. The designation shall be in writing and filed
with the commissioner of commerce and economic development. If no designation is
made and filed or if process cannot be served in this state upon the designated
agent, process may be served upon the commissioner of commerce and economic
development, but the service upon the commissioner is not effective unless the
plaintiff or petitioner immediately mails a copy of the process and pleadings by
certified or registered mail to the defendant or respondent at the last
ascertainable address of the defendant or respondent. An affidavit of compliance
with this section shall be filed with the clerk of the court having jurisdiction
on or before the return day for the process, if any, or within any further time
allowed by the court.
Article 9: General Provisions
Section 345. Mediation and Binding Arbitration.
- (a) A landlord and a tenant may agree to mediate disputes between
them as to an obligation of either of them arising out of the rental
agreement. If the landlord and tenant agree to mediate disputes, they shall
include the scope of the agreement within the executed rental agreement,
incorporate a reference to that agreement within the rental agreement, or
add the text of the agreement as a separate attachment to the rental
agreement.
- (b) A landlord and a tenant may agree to binding arbitration of the
disputes between them as to an obligation of either of them arising out of
the rental agreement. If the landlord and tenant agree to binding
arbitration, they shall include the scope of the agreement within the
executed rental agreement, incorporate a reference to that agreement within
the rental agreement, or add the text of the agreement as a separate
attachment to the rental agreement.
Article 9: General Provisions
Section 350. Attorney Fees.
Attorney fees shall be allowed to the prevailing party in any proceeding
arising out of this chapter or a rental agreement.
Article 9: General Provisions
Section 360. Definitions.
In this chapter
- (1) "abandonment" means that the tenant has left the
dwelling unit and the tenant's personal belongings in it and has been
absent for a continuous period of seven days or longer without giving
notice under AS 34.03.150 and has defaulted in the payment of rent;
- (2) "building and housing codes" include any law,
ordinance, or governmental regulation concerning fitness for habitation,
or the construction, maintenance, operation, occupancy, use, or appearance
of a premise or dwelling unit;
- (3) "dwelling unit" means a structure or a part of a
structure that issued as a home, residence, or sleeping place by one
person who maintains a household or by two or more persons who maintain a
common household, and includes mobile homes, and if located in a mobile
home park, the lot or space upon which a mobile home is placed;
- (4) "fair rental value" means the average rental rate
in the community for available dwelling units of similar size and
features;
- (5) "good faith" means honesty in fact in the conduct
of the transaction concerned;
- (6) "illegal activity involving alcoholic beverages"
means a person's delivery of an alcoholic beverage in violation of AS
04.11.010(b) in an area where the results of a local option election have,
under AS 04.11.490 - 04.11.500, prohibited the Alcoholic Beverage Control
Board from issuing, renewing, or transferring a liquor license or permit
under AS 04;
- (7) "illegal activity involving a controlled substance"
means a violation of AS 11.71.010(a), 11.71.020(a), 11.71.030(a)(1) or
(2), or 11.71.040(a)(1), (2), or (5);
- (8) "illegal activity involving gambling or promoting
gambling" means a violation of
- (A) AS 11.66.200, other than a social game as that term is
defined by AS 11.66.280(9); and
- (B) AS 11.66.210 or 11.66.220;
- (9) "illegal activity involving an imitation controlled
substance" means a violation of AS 11.73.010 - 11.73.030;
- (10) "illegal activity involving a place of
prostitution" means a violation of AS 11.66.120(a)(1) or
11.66.130(a)(1) or (4);
- (11) "landlord" means the owner, lessor, or sublessor
of the dwelling unit or the building of which it is a part, and it also
means a manager of the premises who fails to disclose as required by AS
34.03.080;
- (12) "organization" includes a corporation, government,
governmental subdivision or agency, business trust, estate, trust,
partnership or association, two or more persons having a joint or common
interest, and any other legal entity;
- (13) "owner" means one or more persons, jointly or
severally, in whom is vested all or part of the legal title to property or
all or part of the beneficial ownership of property and a right to present
use of the premises; the term includes a mortgagee in possession;
- (14) "premises" means a dwelling unit and the structure
of which it is a part and facilities and appurtenances in it and grounds,
areas, and facilities held out for the use of tenants generally or whose
use is promised to the tenant;
- (15) "prepaid rent" means that amount of money demanded
by the landlord at the initiation of the tenancy for the purpose of
ensuring that rent will be paid, but does not include the first month's
rent or money received as security for damage;
- (16) "prostitution" means an act in violation of AS
11.66.100;
- (17) "rent" means the uniform periodic payment due the
landlord, however denominated;
- (18) "rental agreement" means all agreements, written
or oral, and valid rules and regulations adopted under AS 34.03.130
embodying the terms and conditions concerning the use and occupancy of a
dwelling unit and premises;
- (19) "sanitary facility" means a flush toilet and
proper drainage for all toilets, sinks, basins, bathtubs, and showers;
- (20) "single family residence" means a structure
maintained and used as a single dwelling unit;
- (21) "tenant" means a person entitled under a rental
agreement to occupy a dwelling unit to the exclusion of others;
- (22) "undeveloped rural area" means an area where
public sewer or water services are not available.
Article 9: General Provisions
Section 370. Applicability.
After March 19, 1974, this chapter applies to any rental agreement, lease, or
tenancy entered into, extended, or renewed by the payment of rent on or
subsequent to that date.
Article 9: General Provisions
Section 380. Short Title.
This chapter may be cited as the "Uniform Residential Landlord and
Tenant Act."
Alaska Statutes Title 34 Property
Chapter 5 Agricultural and Personal Property
Article 1: Agricultural Property
Section 25. Agricultural Tenants.
A tenant whose lease or occupancy is for agricultural purposes and who
breaches the rental agreement, or continues in possession of the premises at the
expiration of the time limited in or contrary to a condition or covenant in the
lease or agreement under which the tenant holds, shall be provided with a
written notice specifying the breach and demanding the tenant quit the premises
at least 30 days before commencement of an action for the recovery of the
property. The tenant shall have free access to the premises to cultivate and
harvest crops or produce planted by the tenant before the service of the notice
of the breach and demand to quit the premises.
Alaska Statutes Title 9 Code of Civil Procedure
Chapter 45 Actions Relating to Real Property
Article 2: Forcible Entry and Detainer
Section 100. Notice to Quit.
- (a) Except where service of written notice is made under AS
09.45.090(a)(1) or (b)(1), or except when notice to quit is not required by
AS 09.45.090(a)(3) or (b)(3), a person entitled to the premises who seeks to
recover possession of the premises may not commence and maintain an action
to recover possession of premises under AS 09.45.060 - 09.45.160 unless the
person first gives a notice to quit to the person in possession.
- (b) To recover possession of premises after a tenant or person in
possession has failed or refused to pay rent due, service of the written
notice required by AS 34.03.220(b) or of a demand in writing for possession
of the premises
- (1) constitutes notice to quit, and service of a separate notice
to quit is not required; and
- (2) satisfies the requirements of (c) of this section and AS
34.03.310(c).
- (c) A notice to quit shall be in writing and shall be served upon
the tenant or person in possession by being
- (1) delivered to the tenant or person;
- (2) left at the premises in case of absence from the premises; or
- (3) sent by registered or certified mail.
Article 2: Forcible Entry and Detainer
Section 105. Content of Notice to Quit.
Notice to quit served upon the tenant or person in possession must
- (1) state
- (A) the nature of the breach or violation of the lease or
rental agreement or other reason for termination of the tenancy of the
tenant or person in possession;
- (B) in circumstances in which the breach or violation described
in (A) of this paragraph may be corrected by the tenant or person in
possession to avoid the termination of the tenancy, the nature of the
remedial action to be taken, and the date and time by which the
corrective actions must be completed in order to avoid termination of
the tenancy;
- (C) the date and time when the tenancy of the tenant or person
in possession under the lease or rental agreement will terminate;
- (2) direct the tenant or person in possession to quit the
premises not later than the date and time of the termination of the
tenancy; and
- (3) give notice to the tenant or person in possession that, if
the tenancy terminates and the tenant or person in possession continues to
occupy the premises, the landlord may commence a civil action to remove
the tenant or person and recover possession.
Article 2: Forcible Entry and Detainer
Section 110. Time When Action to Recover Possession May Be Brought.
An action for the recovery of the possession of the premises may be commenced
on or after the date the tenant or person in possession unlawfully holds
possession of the dwelling unit or rental premises by force, as determined under
AS 09.45.090.
Alaska Statutes Title 9 Code of Civil Procedure
Chapter 50 Actions Where State a Party
Article 2: Abatement of Lewd Houses
Section 170. Abatement of Places Used For Certain Acts.
- (a) A person who erects, establishes, continues, maintains, uses,
owns, or leases a building, structure, or other place used for one of the
following activities is guilty of maintaining a nuisance, and the building,
structure, or place, or the ground itself in or upon which or in any part of
which the activity is conducted, permitted, carried on, continues, or
exists, and its furniture, fixtures, and other contents, constitute a
nuisance and may be enjoined and abated:
- (1) prostitution;
- (2) an illegal activity involving a place of prostitution; or
- (3) an illegal activity involving
- (A) alcoholic beverages;
- (B) a controlled substance;
- (C) an imitation controlled substance; or
- (D) gambling or promoting gambling.
- (b) In this section, "illegal activity involving alcoholic
beverages," "illegal activity involving a controlled
substance," "illegal activity involving gambling or promoting
gambling," "illegal activity involving an imitation controlled
substance," "illegal activity involving a place of
prostitution," and "prostitution" have the meanings given in
AS 34.03.360.
Alaska Statutes Title 18 Health, Safety, and Housing
Chapter 70 Fire Protection
Article 1: Prevention and Investigation
Section 95. Smoke Detection Devices.
- (a) Smoke detection devices shall be installed and maintained in
all dwelling units in the state. The devices shall be of a type and
installed in a manner approved by the state fire marshal.
- (b) In a dwelling unit occupied under the terms of a rental
agreement or under a month-to-month tenancy,
- (1) at the time of each occupancy the landlord shall provide
smoke detection devices in working condition and, after notification by
the tenant, shall be responsible for replacement; and
- (2) the tenant shall keep the devices in working condition by
keeping charged batteries in battery-operated devices, if possible, by
testing the devices periodically, if possible, and by refraining from
permanently disabling the devices.
- (c) If a landlord did not know and had not been notified of the
need to repair or replace a smoke detection device, the landlord's failure
to repair or replace the device may not be considered as evidence of
negligence in a subsequent civil action arising from death, property loss,
or personal injury.
- (d) In this section, "dwelling unit,"
"landlord," "rental agreement," and "tenant"
have the meanings given in AS 34.03.360.