- Talk to your landlord. Explain your rights: inform your landlord that Montana law does not permit the landlord to cut off essential services.Whatever you discuss with the landlord, follow it up in writing and keep a copy for yourself
- If your landlord fails to provide essential services, such as running water, heat, electricity, gas, then you must give the landlord written notice about the problem and then you can:
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- Obtain the essential service yourself. So, if the gas has been shut off but the electricity still works, you could purchase a space heater to provide the necessary heat. You can deduct the cost of the heaters and the additional cost of the electricity from the rent.
- Recover damages from the landlord based upon the value of the apartment, without the essential service or the extra charges you had to pay.
- Get substitute housing while the problem continues. If you do this, you are excused from paying rent for the time you are in the substitute housing.
Remember, you only have these options if an essential service is interrupted because the landlord did it on purpose or by accident.
In order to choose any option, you must give the landlord notice of the conditions that need to be fixed, and the landlord must have a reasonable time to fix the problem. You can't choose any of the options if you, a member of your family or a guest of yours created the problem.
If the essential services are not provided after the landlord has had a reasonable time to fix the problem, you may have additional remedies, such as injunctive relief - meaning a court order - to make the landlord provide the essential service. You'll need to read Montana's landlord/tenant laws or consult a lawyer to take other steps.