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Landlord Pays $800,000 For Rat Incident

2005_10_ratintub.jpgLandlords for a Bronx apartment building have agreed to pay $800,000 to the family of a little girl who was bitten by a rat in their apartment. Now, steel yourself for how the rat attacked then three year-old Camille Fernandez in 2001: It crawled through a broken tile, as Camille was waiting for her mother to get a towel. When mother Christina Fernandez turned back, Camille was unconscious in the tub, because she tried to shake the rat off her body, but fell and hit her head on the bathtub faucet. Ai!! Run to the Home Depot to get some grout to fix your tiles! According to Fernandez's lawyer, Camille has a "seizure disorder, rat-phobia, panic disorder, and post-traumatic stress," plus "marks on her lower back [from the rat bites], and development and psychological problems." The family had sued the Rosenberg Diamond Development, which manages the building, for millions; interesting, RDD's lawyer approached the family with the $800,000 settlement during jury deliberations. We wonder what the jury would have awarded the family - even jurors with the coldest heart would find this story disgusting and terrible. We're sure the rat was as big as the little girl!

One would hope the Department of Buildings and the Health Department would follow up to make sure the building isn't a rathole, because it's doubtful the building has down much to upgrade conditions. A woman settled with her apartment building last December for $65,000 over a rat incident: As she was taking a shower, the ceiling collapsed with a couple of rats. Come to think of it, that rat story happened in the Bronx as well...and you should check your bathroom ceilings, especially over the shower, too.

Photograph from the Daily News

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Comments [rss]

  • Samantha T

    Believe me, if the tenants had zero merit to their claim, RDD wouldn't have come forward with $800K in settlement money. Curmudgeon - you're absolutely right. Landlords who nickle-and-dime should have to pay the price when this kind of thing goes down. There is no way that rats can push on a tile and find their way into a bathroom in a well-maintained building. As for the child asking for help, I challenge anyone on this thread to say they wouldn't be in absolute shock if this happened in their shower.

  • Curmudgeon

    Oh Chris...tsk tsk...if the landlord actually cares and maintains the structure of the building, there's very little chance of this sort of thing happening (just THINK about the deterioration of the actual wall underneath the tiling in this instance - WTF??). Case in point; my former slumlord building had rats, and only after I complained every day for a month, their "solution" was to send some sweaty, overweight guy with a learning-disabled sidekick to - and I shit you not - place giant glue traps in the kitchen closet!!



    My current building, which just happens to have the best landlord in the world, does not. I am very, very fortunate to have a landlord who cares about his building!



    Also, just what part of this story led you to conclude they "live like pigs?" Their Spanish surname? Classy indeed.

  • Chris

    Another incident where a landlord has to pay a lot of money to pay for something he had no control over. Did he push her down onto the faucet and did he stop her from asking her mom for help? They should have received a month free at most and some medical bills, we landlords can't help it if the tenants live like pigs and invite rats in.

  • Samantha T

    I would have a heartattack if that happened to me, I swear to God.

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