The 25-year-old's landlords were angry since pictures of the garden had attracted many buyers.
Nothing brings a home to life quite like plants, and that’s exactly the vibe one woman created when she moved into a rental house. Though the home itself was a bit underwhelming, she poured years into cultivating a beautiful garden to make it feel like her own. But after seven years, her landlords decided to sell, so they asked her to leave, as reported by DailyDot. Choosing to take her transportable garden setup and shed along with her, she unknowingly sparked outrage from her landlords, who claimed removing the garden hurt the property’s curb appeal. Feeling conflicted, she turned to Redditfor feedback, asking if she was in the wrong for “bringing my garden with me when I moved.”
"I have been renting a house since I was 18 (7 years)," wrote the 25-year-old. "When I moved in, the backyard was a large piece of dirt. No lawn or anything. Just a decently big backyard with a fence all around. It was a cheap but not great house, but I signed because I wanted the backyard space. Over the past few years, I erected a small garden shed, greenhouse, and pizza oven (transportables), planted lots of veggie gardens in big transportable garden beds and put down some nice pavers, an aquaponics set up, and generally made the backyard a really green and beautiful place to be. It became the green oasis all my friends gathered at."
While she lived a happy life, comfortable in her home of seven years, her landlords asked her to leave the place as they planned to sell it. "A few months ago, my landlords let me know they were planning to sell, and my final move-out day was a week ago. When I left, I brought my garden with me to my new place — nothing in my last backyard was directly planted into the ground, and nothing permanent," she wrote. "I dismantled the sheds and greenhouse, loaded up all the pots and garden beds onto a truck, and cleared the backyard in three days with lots of help."
Her landlords were angered she had removed the garden. "My former landlords are furious over this, and demand that I return the backyard to the former state. Apparently, they’d listed the house for sale with pictures of the backyard, and potential buyers were walking away from the house when they saw the barren backyard. They’re accusing me of stealing their plants and wrecking the backyard," she wrote. The 25-year-old said she hadn't violated any agreement but was worried if she had done the wrong thing. "Legally I’m fine — my contract said I could garden, and I have photos from the first real estate walkthrough before I moved in that show that the backyard was in the same state as I first found it (although with more fertile soil now probably). The same real estate agent signed off my final inspection, and I got my deposit back," she wrote.
Her colleagues didn't take too kindly to her decision to move her garden with her. "I’ve received mixed responses though because I saw the landlords taking pictures of my backyard before I left but didn’t make the connection because, in my honest opinion, when pictures of a house has furniture in it, you don’t expect to also get free furniture," she wrote. Some colleagues argued that relocating the garden was unnecessary and led to a decrease in the house's value. They accused her of moving her garden prior to the lockdown, which stopped the homeowners from planning a landscape.
A majority sided with her, stating it was common for homeowners to benefit from tenant improvements. "This is a very classic story of a landlord trying to benefit from home improvements paid for by the tenant. If your landlord was honest, he would have asked you how much you wanted to leave the garden as it was. You owe him nothing," wrote one person. Another added, "They can pay you for improvements they’ve allowed you to make over time with your own money. In fact, a similar thing happened to me at my old apartment. I was granted permission to repaint the concrete balcony. I put down some lush fake lawn, some timber decking, outdoor furniture, hanging plants and fairy lights. When the owners were selling they asked me how much to leave it as is. I set my price and was literally paid to move out. Win-win all round."
This article originally appeared 2 years ago.