TEXAS PROPERTY CODE

TITLE 8. LANDLORD AND TENANT

CHAPTER 92. RESIDENTIAL TENANCIES

SUBCHAPTER B. REPAIR OR CLOSING OF LEASEHOLD


	§ 92.051. APPLICATION.  This subchapter applies to a 
lease executed, entered into, renewed, or extended on or after 
September 1, 1979.

Acts 1983, 68th Leg., p. 3632, ch. 576, § 1, eff. Jan. 1, 1984.            


	§ 92.052. LANDLORD'S DUTY TO REPAIR OR REMEDY.  (a) A 
landlord shall make a diligent effort to repair or remedy a 
condition if:
		(1)  the tenant specifies the condition in a notice to 
the person to whom or to the place where rent is normally paid;
		(2)  the tenant is not delinquent in the payment of rent 
at the time notice is given;  and
		(3)  the condition materially affects the physical 
health or safety of an ordinary tenant.
	(b)  Unless the condition was caused by normal wear and tear, 
the landlord does not have a duty during the lease term or a renewal 
or extension to repair or remedy a condition caused by:
		(1)  the tenant;                                                              
		(2)  a lawful occupant in the tenant's dwelling;                              
		(3)  a member of the tenant's family;  or                                     
		(4)  a guest or invitee of the tenant.                                        
	(c)  This subchapter does not require the landlord:                            
		(1)  to furnish utilities from a utility company if as a 
practical matter the utility lines of the company are not 
reasonably available;  or
		(2)  to furnish security guards.                                              
	(d)  The tenant's notice under Subsection (a) must be in 
writing only if the tenant's lease is in writing and requires 
written notice.

Acts 1983, 68th Leg., p. 3632, ch. 576, § 1, eff. Jan. 1, 1984.  
Amended by Acts 1989, 71st Leg., ch. 650, § 3, eff. Aug. 28, 
1989;  Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 48, § 14, eff. Sept. 1, 1993.


	§ 92.053. BURDEN OF PROOF.  (a) Except as provided by this 
section, the tenant has the burden of proof in a judicial action to 
enforce a right resulting from the landlord's failure to repair or 
remedy a condition under Section 92.052.
	(b)  If the landlord does not provide a written explanation 
for delay in performing a duty to repair or remedy on or before the 
fifth day after receiving from the tenant a written demand for an 
explanation, the landlord has the burden of proving that he made a 
diligent effort to repair and that a reasonable time for repair did 
not elapse.

Acts 1983, 68th Leg., p. 3633, ch. 576, § 1, eff. Jan. 1, 1984.            


	§ 92.054. CASUALTY LOSS.  (a) If a condition results from 
an insured casualty loss, such as fire, smoke, hail, explosion, or a 
similar cause, the period for repair does not begin until the 
landlord receives the insurance proceeds.
	(b)  If after a casualty loss the rental premises are as a 
practical matter totally unusable for residential purposes and if 
the casualty loss is not caused by the negligence or fault of the 
tenant, a member of the tenant's family, or a guest or invitee of 
the tenant, either the landlord or the tenant may terminate the 
lease by giving written notice to the other any time before repairs 
are completed.  If the lease is terminated, the tenant is entitled 
only to a pro rata refund of rent from the date the tenant moves out 
and to a refund of any security deposit otherwise required by law.
	(c)  If after a casualty loss the rental premises are 
partially unusable for residential purposes and if the casualty 
loss is not caused by the negligence or fault of the tenant, a 
member of the tenant's family, or a guest or invitee of the tenant, 
the tenant is entitled to reduction in the rent in an amount 
proportionate to the extent the premises are unusable because of 
the casualty, but only on judgment of a county or district court.  A 
landlord and tenant may agree otherwise in a written lease.

Acts 1983, 68th Leg., p. 3633, ch. 576, § 1, eff. Jan. 1, 1984.  
Amended by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 48, § 15, eff. Sept. 1, 
1993.


	§ 92.055. CLOSING THE RENTAL PREMISES.  (a) A landlord 
may close a rental unit at any time by giving written notice by 
certified mail, return receipt requested, to the tenant and to the 
local health officer and local building inspector, if any, stating 
that:
		(1)  the landlord is terminating the tenancy as soon as 
legally possible;  and
		(2)  after the tenant moves out the landlord will 
either immediately demolish the rental unit or no longer use the 
unit for residential purposes.
	(b)  After a tenant receives the notice and moves out:                         
		(1)  the local health officer or building inspector may 
not allow occupancy of or utility service by separate meter to the 
rental unit until the officer certifies that he knows of no 
condition that materially affects the physical health or safety of 
an ordinary tenant;  and
		(2)  the landlord may not allow reoccupancy or 
reconnection of utilities by separate meter within six months after 
the date the tenant moves out.
	(c)  If the landlord gives the tenant the notice closing the 
rental unit:    
		(1)  before the tenant gives a repair notice to the 
landlord, the remedies of this subchapter do not apply;
		(2)  after the tenant gives a repair notice to the 
landlord but before the landlord has had a reasonable time to make 
repairs, the tenant is entitled only to the remedies under 
Subsection (d) of this section and Subdivisions (3), (4), and (5) of 
Subsection (a) of Section 92.0563;  or
		(3)  after the tenant gives a repair notice to the 
landlord and after the landlord has had a reasonable time to make 
repairs, the tenant is entitled only to the remedies under 
Subsection (d) of this section and Subdivisions (3), (4), and (5) of 
Subsection (a) of Section 92.0563.
	(d)  If the landlord closes the rental unit after the tenant 
gives the landlord a notice to repair and the tenant moves out on or 
before the end of the rental term, the landlord must pay the 
tenant's actual and reasonable moving expenses, refund a pro rata 
portion of the tenant's rent from the date the tenant moves out, 
and, if otherwise required by law, return the tenant's security 
deposit.
	(e)  A landlord who violates Subsection (b) or (d) is liable 
to the tenant for an amount equal to the total of one month's rent 
plus $100 and attorney's fees.
	(f)  The closing of a rental unit does not prohibit the 
occupancy of other apartments, nor does this subchapter prohibit 
occupancy of or utility service by master or individual meter to 
other rental units in an apartment complex that have not been closed 
under this section.  If another provision of this subchapter 
conflicts with this section, this section controls.

Acts 1983, 68th Leg., p. 3634, ch. 576, § 1, eff. Jan. 1, 1984.  
Amended by Acts 1989, 71st Leg., ch. 650, § 4, eff. Aug. 28, 
1989.


	§ 92.056. LANDLORD LIABILITY AND TENANT REMEDIES;  NOTICE 
AND TIME FOR REPAIR.  (a) A landlord's liability under this section 
is subject to Section 92.052(b) regarding conditions that are 
caused by a tenant and Section 92.054 regarding conditions that are 
insured casualties.
	(b)  A landlord is liable to a tenant as provided by this 
subchapter if:     
		(1)  the tenant has given the landlord notice to repair 
or remedy a condition by giving that notice to the person to whom or 
to the place where the tenant's rent is normally paid;
		(2)  the condition materially affects the physical 
health or safety of an ordinary tenant;
		(3)  the tenant has given the landlord a subsequent 
written notice to repair or remedy the condition after a reasonable 
time to repair or remedy the condition following the notice given 
under Subdivision (1) or the tenant has given the notice under 
Subdivision (1) by sending that notice by certified mail, return 
receipt requested, or by registered mail;
		(4)  the landlord has had a reasonable time to repair or 
remedy the condition after the landlord received the tenant's 
notice under Subdivision (1) and, if applicable, the tenant's 
subsequent notice under Subdivision (3);
		(5)  the landlord has not made a diligent effort to 
repair or remedy the condition after the landlord received the 
tenant's notice under Subdivision (1) and, if applicable, the 
tenant's notice under Subdivision (3);  and
		(6)  the tenant was not delinquent in the payment of 
rent at the time any notice required by this subsection was given.
	(c)  For purposes of Subsection (b)(4) or (5), a landlord is 
considered to have received the tenant's notice when the landlord 
or the landlord's agent or employee has actually received the 
notice or when the United States Postal Service has attempted to 
deliver the notice to the landlord.
	(d)  For purposes of Subsection (b)(3) or (4), in determining 
whether a period of time is a reasonable time to repair or remedy a 
condition, there is a rebuttable presumption that seven days is a 
reasonable time.  To rebut that presumption, the date on which the 
landlord received the tenant's notice, the severity and nature of 
the condition, and the reasonable availability of materials and 
labor and of utilities from a utility company must be considered.
	(e)  Except as provided in Subsection (f), a tenant to whom a 
landlord is liable under Subsection (b) of this section may:
		(1)  terminate the lease;                                                     
		(2)  have the condition repaired or remedied according 
to Section 92.0561;  
		(3)  deduct from the tenant's rent, without necessity 
of judicial action, the cost of the repair or remedy according to 
Section 92.0561;  and
		(4)  obtain judicial remedies according to Section 
92.0563.                 
	(f)  A tenant who elects to terminate the lease under 
Subsection (e) is:     
		(1)  entitled to a pro rata refund of rent from the date 
of termination or the date the tenant moves out, whichever is later;
		(2)  entitled to deduct the tenant's security deposit 
from the tenant's rent without necessity of lawsuit or obtain a 
refund of the tenant's security deposit according to law;  and
		(3)  not entitled to the other repair and deduct 
remedies under Section 92.0561 or the judicial remedies under 
Subdivisions (1) and (2) of Subsection (a) of Section 92.0563.

Acts 1983, 68th Leg., p. 3635, ch. 576, § 1, eff. Jan. 1, 1984.  
Amended by Acts 1989, 71st Leg., ch. 650, § 5, eff. Aug. 28, 
1989;  Acts 1997, 75th Leg., ch. 1205, § 11, eff. Jan. 1, 1998.


	§ 92.0561. TENANT'S REPAIR AND DEDUCT REMEDIES.  (a) If 
the landlord is liable to the tenant under Section 92.056(b), the 
tenant may have the condition repaired or remedied and may deduct 
the cost from a subsequent rent payment as provided in this section.
	(b)  The tenant's deduction for the cost of the repair or 
remedy may not exceed the amount of one month's rent under the lease 
or $500, whichever is greater.  However, if the tenant's rent is 
subsidized in whole or in part by a governmental agency, the 
deduction limitation of one month's rent shall mean the fair market 
rent for the dwelling and not the rent that the tenant pays.  The 
fair market rent shall be determined by the governmental agency 
subsidizing the rent, or in the absence of such a determination, it 
shall be a reasonable amount of rent under the circumstances.
	(c)  Repairs and deductions under this section may be made as 
often as necessary so long as the total repairs and deductions in 
any one month do not exceed one month's rent or $500, whichever is 
greater.
	(d)  Repairs under this section may be made only if all of the 
following requirements are met:
		(1)  The landlord has a duty to repair or remedy the 
condition under Section 92.052, and the duty has not been waived in 
a written lease by the tenant under Subsection (e) or (f) of Section 
92.006.
		(2)  The tenant has given notice to the landlord as 
required by Section 92.056(b)(1), and, if required, a subsequent 
notice under Section 92.056(b)(3), and at least one of those 
notices states that the tenant intends to repair or remedy the 
condition.  The notice shall also contain a reasonable description 
of the intended repair or remedy.
		(3)  Any one of the following events has occurred:                            
			(A)  The landlord has failed to remedy the backup 
or overflow of raw sewage inside the tenant's dwelling or the 
flooding from broken pipes or natural drainage inside the dwelling.
			(B)  The landlord has expressly or impliedly 
agreed in the lease to furnish potable water to the tenant's 
dwelling and the water service to the dwelling has totally ceased.
			(C)  The landlord has expressly or impliedly 
agreed in the lease to furnish heating or cooling equipment;  the 
equipment is producing inadequate heat or cooled air;  and the 
landlord has been notified in writing by the appropriate local 
housing, building, or health official or other official having 
jurisdiction that the lack of heat or cooling materially affects 
the health or safety of an ordinary tenant.
			(D)  The landlord has been notified in writing by 
the appropriate local housing, building, or health official or 
other official having jurisdiction that the condition materially 
affects the health or safety of an ordinary tenant.
	(e)  If the requirements of Subsection (d) of this section 
are met, a tenant may:
		(1)  have the condition repaired or remedied 
immediately following the tenant's notice of intent to repair if 
the condition involves sewage or flooding as referred to in 
Paragraph (A) of Subdivision (3) of Subsection (d) of this section;
		(2)  have the condition repaired or remedied if the 
condition involves a cessation of potable water as referred to in 
Paragraph (A) of Subdivision (3) of Subsection (d) of this section 
and if the landlord has failed to repair or remedy the condition 
within three days following the tenant's delivery of notice of 
intent to repair;
		(3)  have the condition repaired or remedied if the 
condition involves inadequate heat or cooled air as referred to in 
Paragraph (C) of Subdivision (3) of Subsection (d) of this section 
and if the landlord has failed to repair the condition within three 
days after delivery of the tenant's notice of intent to repair;  or
		(4)  have the condition repaired or remedied if the 
condition is not covered by Paragraph (A), (B), or (C) of 
Subdivision (3) of Subsection (d) of this section and involves a 
condition affecting the physical health or safety of the ordinary 
tenant as referred to in Paragraph (D) of Subdivision (3) of 
Subsection (d) of this section and if the landlord has failed to 
repair or remedy the condition within seven days after delivery of 
the tenant's notice of intent to repair.
	(f)  Repairs made pursuant to the tenant's notice must be 
made by a company, contractor, or repairman listed in the yellow or 
business pages of the telephone directory or in the classified 
advertising section of a newspaper of the local city, county, or 
adjacent county at the time of the tenant's notice of intent to 
repair.  Unless the landlord and tenant agree otherwise under 
Subsection (g) of this section, repairs may not be made by the 
tenant, the tenant's immediate family, the tenant's employer or 
employees, or a company in which the tenant has an ownership 
interest.  Repairs may not be made to the foundation or load-bearing 
structural elements of the building if it contains two or more 
dwelling units.
	(g)  A landlord and a tenant may mutually agree for the 
tenant to repair or remedy, at the landlord's expense, any 
condition of the dwelling regardless of whether it materially 
affects the health or safety of an ordinary tenant.  However, the 
landlord's duty to repair or remedy conditions covered by this 
subchapter may not be waived except as provided by Subsection (e) or 
(f) of Section 92.006.
	(h)  Repairs made pursuant to the tenant's notice must be 
made in compliance with applicable building codes, including a 
building permit when required.
	(i)  The tenant shall not have authority to contract for 
labor or materials in excess of what the tenant may deduct under 
this section.  The landlord is not liable to repairmen, 
contractors, or material suppliers who furnish labor or materials 
to repair or remedy the condition.  A repairman or supplier shall 
not have a lien for materials or services arising out of repairs 
contracted for by the tenant under this section.
	(j)  When deducting the cost of repairs from the rent 
payment, the tenant shall furnish the landlord, along with payment 
of the balance of the rent, a copy of the repair bill and the receipt 
for its payment.  A repair bill and receipt may be the same 
document.
	(k)  If the landlord repairs or remedies the condition or 
delivers an affidavit for delay under Section 92.0562 to the tenant 
after the tenant has contacted a repairman but before the repairman 
commences work, the landlord shall be liable for the cost incurred 
by the tenant for the repairman's trip charge, and the tenant may 
deduct the charge from the tenant's rent as if it were a repair 
cost.

Added by Acts 1989, 71st Leg., ch. 650, § 6, eff. Aug. 28, 1989.  
Amended by Acts 1997, 75th Leg., ch. 1205, § 12, eff. Jan. 1, 
1998.


	§ 92.0562. LANDLORD AFFIDAVIT FOR DELAY.  (a) The tenant 
must delay contracting for repairs under Section 92.0561 if, before 
the tenant contracts for the repairs, the landlord delivers to the 
tenant an affidavit, signed and sworn to under oath by the landlord 
or his authorized agent and complying with this section.
	(b)  The affidavit must summarize the reasons for the delay 
and the diligent efforts made by the landlord up to the date of the 
affidavit to get the repairs done.  The affidavit must state facts 
showing that the landlord has made and is making diligent efforts to 
repair the condition, and it must contain dates, names, addresses, 
and telephone numbers of contractors, suppliers, and repairmen 
contacted by the owner.
	(c)  Affidavits under this section may delay repair by the 
tenant for:       
		(1)  15 days if the landlord's failure to repair is 
caused by a delay in obtaining necessary parts for which the 
landlord is not at fault;  or
		(2)  30 days if the landlord's failure to repair is 
caused by a general shortage of labor or materials for repair 
following a natural disaster such as a hurricane, tornado, flood, 
extended freeze, or widespread windstorm.
	(d)  Affidavits for delay based on grounds other than those 
listed in Subsection (c) of this section are unlawful, and if used, 
they are of no effect.  The landlord may file subsequent affidavits, 
provided that the total delay of the repair or remedy extends no 
longer than six months from the date the landlord delivers the first 
affidavit to the tenant.
	(e)  The affidavit must be delivered to the tenant by any of 
the following methods:
		(1)  personal delivery to the tenant;                                         
		(2)  certified mail, return receipt requested, to the 
tenant;  or           
		(3)  leaving the notice inside the dwelling in a 
conspicuous place if notice in that manner is authorized in a 
written lease.
	(f)  Affidavits for delay by a landlord under this section 
must be submitted in good faith.  Following delivery of the 
affidavit, the landlord must continue diligent efforts to repair or 
remedy the condition.  There shall be a rebuttable presumption that 
the landlord acted in good faith and with continued diligence for 
the first affidavit for delay the landlord delivers to the tenant.  
The landlord shall have the burden of pleading and proving good 
faith and continued diligence for subsequent affidavits for delay.  
A landlord who violates this section shall be liable to the tenant 
for all judicial remedies under Section 92.0563 except that the 
civil penalty under Subdivision (3) of Subsection (a) of Section 
92.0563 shall be one month's rent plus $1,000.
	(g)  If the landlord is liable to the tenant under Section 
92.056 and if a new landlord, in good faith and without knowledge of 
the tenant's notice of intent to repair, has acquired title to the 
tenant's dwelling by foreclosure, deed in lieu of foreclosure, or 
general warranty deed in a bona fide purchase, then the following 
shall apply:
		(1)  The tenant's right to terminate the lease under 
this subchapter shall not be affected, and the tenant shall have no 
duty to give additional notice to the new landlord.
		(2)  The tenant's right to repair and deduct for 
conditions involving sewage backup or overflow, flooding inside the 
dwelling, or a cutoff of potable water under Subsection (e) of 
Section 92.0561 shall not be affected, and the tenant shall have no 
duty to give additional notice to the new landlord.
		(3)  For conditions other than those specified in 
Subdivision (2) of this subsection, if the new landlord acquires 
title as described in this subsection and has notified the tenant of 
the name and address of the new landlord or the new landlord's 
authorized agent and if the tenant has not already contracted for 
the repair or remedy at the time the tenant is so notified, the 
tenant must deliver to the new landlord a written notice of intent 
to repair or remedy the condition, and the new landlord shall have a 
reasonable time to complete the repair before the tenant may repair 
or remedy the condition.  No further notice from the tenant is 
necessary in order for the tenant to repair or remedy the condition 
after a reasonable time has elapsed.
		(4)  The tenant's judicial remedies under Section 
92.0563 shall be limited to recovery against the landlord to whom 
the tenant gave the required notices until the tenant has given the 
new landlord the notices required by this section and otherwise 
complied with Section 92.056 as to the new landlord.
		(5)  If the new landlord violates this subsection, the 
new landlord is liable to the tenant for a civil penalty of one 
month's rent plus $2,000, actual damages, and attorney's fees.
		(6)  No provision of this section shall affect any 
right of a foreclosing superior lienholder to terminate, according 
to law, any interest in the premises held by the holders of 
subordinate liens, encumbrances, leases, or other interests and 
shall not affect any right of the tenant to terminate the lease 
according to law.

Added by Acts 1989, 71st Leg., ch. 650, § 7, eff. Aug. 28, 1989.           


	§ 92.0563. TENANT'S JUDICIAL REMEDIES.  (a) A tenant's 
judicial remedies under Section 92.056 shall include:
		(1)  an order directing the landlord to take reasonable 
action to repair or remedy the condition;
		(2)  an order reducing the tenant's rent, from the date 
of the first repair notice, in proportion to the reduced rental 
value resulting from the condition until the condition is repaired 
or remedied;
		(3)  a judgment against the landlord for a civil 
penalty of one month's rent plus $500;
		(4)  a judgment against the landlord for the amount of 
the tenant's actual damages;  and
		(5)  court costs and attorney's fees, excluding any 
attorney's fees for a cause of action for damages relating to a 
personal injury.
	(b)  A landlord who knowingly violates Section 92.006 by 
contracting orally or in writing with a tenant to waive the 
landlord's duty to repair under this subchapter shall be liable to 
the tenant for actual damages, a civil penalty of one month's rent 
plus $2,000, and reasonable attorney's fees.  For purposes of this 
subsection, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that the 
landlord acted without knowledge of the violation.  The tenant 
shall have the burden of pleading and proving a knowing violation.  
If the lease is in writing and is not in violation of Section 
92.006, the tenant's proof of a knowing violation must be clear and 
convincing.  A mutual agreement for tenant repair under Subsection 
(g) of Section 92.0561 is not a violation of Section 92.006.
	(c)  The justice, county, and district courts have 
concurrent jurisdiction of an action under Subsection (a) of this 
section except that the justice court may not order repairs under 
Subdivision (1) of Subsection (a) of this section.

Added by Acts 1989, 71st Leg., ch. 650, § 8, eff. Aug. 28, 1989.           


	§ 92.058. LANDLORD REMEDY FOR TENANT VIOLATION.  (a) If 
the tenant withholds rents, causes repairs to be performed, or 
makes rent deductions for repairs in violation of this subchapter, 
the landlord may recover actual damages from the tenant.  If, after 
a landlord has notified a tenant in writing of (1) the illegality of 
the tenant's rent withholding or the tenant's proposed repair and 
(2) the penalties of this subchapter, the tenant withholds rent, 
causes repairs to be performed, or makes rent deductions for 
repairs in bad faith violation of this subchapter, the landlord may 
recover from the tenant a civil penalty of one month's rent plus 
$500.
	(b)  Notice under this section must be in writing and may be 
given in person, by mail, or by delivery to the premises.
	(c)  The landlord has the burden of pleading and proving, by 
clear and convincing evidence, that the landlord gave the tenant 
the required notice of the illegality and the penalties and that the 
tenant's violation was done in bad faith.  In any litigation under 
this subsection, the prevailing party shall recover reasonable 
attorney's fees from the nonprevailing party.

Acts 1983, 68th Leg., p. 3638, ch. 576, § 1, eff. Jan. 1, 1984.  
Amended by Acts 1989, 71st Leg., ch. 650, § 10, eff. Aug. 28, 
1989.


	§ 92.060. AGENTS FOR DELIVERY OF NOTICE.  A managing 
agent, leasing agent, or resident manager is the agent of the 
landlord for purposes of notice and other communications required 
or permitted by this subchapter.

Acts 1983, 68th Leg., p. 3639, ch. 576, § 1, eff. Jan. 1, 1984.            


	§ 92.061. EFFECT ON OTHER RIGHTS.  The duties of a 
landlord and the remedies of a tenant under this subchapter are in 
lieu of existing common law and other statutory law warranties and 
duties of landlords for maintenance, repair, security, 
habitability, and nonretaliation, and remedies of tenants for a 
violation of those warranties and duties.  Otherwise, this 
subchapter does not affect any other right of a landlord or tenant 
under contract, statutory law, or common law that is consistent 
with the purposes of this subchapter or any right a landlord or 
tenant may have to bring an action for personal injury or property 
damage under the law of this state.  This subchapter does not impose 
obligations on a landlord or tenant other than those expressly 
stated in this subchapter.

Acts 1983, 68th Leg., p. 3639, ch. 576, § 1, eff. Jan. 1, 1984.  
Amended by Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 200, § 5, eff. Aug. 26, 
1985.