(a) Title.
These regulations shall be known as the residential
rentals and property maintenance code of the city, herein referred
to as the “rental code.”
(b) Purpose.
The purpose of this rental code is to provide
minimum standards to safeguard life or limb, health, property, and
public welfare by regulating and controlling the maintenance of residential
rental properties as defined herein. This rental code establishes
minimum basic standards for safety from fire and for the safe and
sanitary maintenance of residential rental properties. This rental
code is in addition to other building and safety codes and ordinances
adopted by the city in this code, including but not limited to the
fire code. The city also recognizes a need in the established historic
districts in the community to ensure that rental housing units meet
minimum safety and health standards by providing a system for ensuring
that both absentee and local landlords correct deficiencies and properly
maintain rental property within the city. This purpose will be achieved
by providing a system of organized inspection of residential rental
units in the city’s historic districts by developing a system
to monitor and inspect the orderly occupancy of residential rental
units in these areas.
(c) Applicability.
The provisions of this rental code shall
apply to all existing residential rental single-family dwellings,
duplexes, triplexes, quadraplexes, short-term rentals, boarding or
rooming houses, habitable rooms, and group homes or halfway houses
used, designed, or intended to be used for dwelling purposes on a
rental basis.
(Ordinance 2018-020, sec. 2, adopted 7/23/18; 1988 Code, sec. 7-170; Ordinance 2022-028 adopted 5/9/22)
The following words, terms, and phrases, when used in this article,
shall have the meanings ascribed to them in this section, except where
the context clearly indicates a different meaning:
Duplex.
A structure containing two (2) dwelling units.
Dwelling unit.
A single unit providing complete, independent living facilities
for one (1) or more persons, including permanent provisions for living,
sleeping, eating, cooking and sanitation.
Group home or halfway house.
A residential facility that provides training, care, supervision,
treatment, or rehabilitation to persons with mental illness, persons
with intellectual or developmental disabilities, the aged, the otherwise
disabled, persons convicted of crimes, or persons suffering from drug
or alcohol addiction, regardless of the number of such persons residing
or receiving services therein.
Habitable room.
A room or enclosed floor space used or intended to be used
for the purposes of living or sleeping, excluding bathrooms, water
closet compartments, laundries, pantries, foyers, or communicating
corridors, closets, and storage spaces. A room or enclosed floor space
used or intended to be used for the purposes of cooking or eating
shall be considered as a room or space being used or intended to be
used for the purpose of living under this definition. A tent or RV
is not included in the definition of a habitable room.
Inspector.
The city manager, community development director, building
official, code enforcement officer, fire marshal and other persons
designated by the city manager.
Occupant.
Any person over 1 year of age, living, sleeping, cooking
or eating in or having actual possession of a dwelling unit.
Operator.
Any person who has charge, care, or control of a building
or part thereof in which dwelling units are let.
Owner.
Any person, agent, operator, firm or corporation or any officer,
principal or majority owner of a firm or corporation having legal
or equitable interest in the property; or recorded in the official
records of Lamar County as holding title to the property; or otherwise
having control of the property, including the guardian of the estate
of any such person, and the executor or administrator of the estate
of such person if ordered to take possession of real property by a
court.
Person.
An individual, corporation, partnership or any other group
acting as a unit.
Quadruplex.
A structure containing four (4) dwelling units.
Plumbing.
Any of the following supplied facilities and equipment: gas
pipes, gas burning equipment, water pipes, garbage disposal units,
waste pipes, water closets, sinks, installed dishwashers, lavatories,
bathtubs, shower baths, installed clothes washing machines, catch
basins, drains, vents, and any other similar supplied fixtures, together
with all connections to water, sewer, or gas lines.
Rent or let property.
To permit, provide or offer possession or occupancy of a
dwelling, dwelling unit, rooming unit, building, premises or structure
by a person who is or is not the legal owner of record thereof, pursuant
to a written or unwritten lease, agreement, or license; and shall
include lease to own, contract for deed, installment sales and purchases
whereby nonpayment of a periodic payment means the occupants may be
evicted without the necessity of either a statutory mortgage foreclosure
procedure, a statutory termination of contract for deed procedure,
or a statutory repossession procedure and other similar procedures.
Renter or tenant.
A person, corporation, partnership, or group dwelling in
residential rental property pursuant to a written or unwritten lease,
agreement, or license with or from the owner.
Residential rental property or residential rental unit.
A structure containing a single dwelling unit, a duplex,
a triplex, a quadruplex, apartment, short-term rental, a rooming or
boarding house, or a group home or halfway house located within a
dwelling and forming a single habitable unit.
Rooming house or boarding house.
A building arranged or occupied for lodging, with or without
meals, for compensation, and not occupied as a one- or two-family
dwelling.
Rooming unit.
Any room or group of rooms forming a single habitable unit
occupied or intended to be occupied for sleeping or living, but not
for cooking purposes.
Short-term rental.
A rental which is a furnished living space available for
short periods of time, from a few days to weeks, but less than on
a month-to-month basis; and are also commonly known as vacation rentals
and are considered an alternative to a hotel.
Supplied.
Paid for, furnished, or provided by or under the control
of the owner or operator.
Temporary housing.
Any tent, trailer, or other structure used for human shelter
which is designed to be transportable and which is not attached to
the ground, to another structure, or to any utilities system on the
same premises for more than 30 consecutive days.
Triplex.
A structure containing three (3) dwelling units.
(Ordinance 2018-020, sec. 2, adopted 7/23/18; 1988 Code, sec. 7-171; Ordinance 2022-028 adopted 5/9/22)
(a) Generally.
The owner of a residential rental property
as defined herein shall maintain such property in compliance with
the standards set forth herein and shall not permit another person
to occupy said residential rental property that is not in a sanitary
and safe condition and which does not comply with the requirements
of this article.
(1) The exterior of a structure shall be maintained in good repair, and
shall be structurally sound and sanitary so as not to pose a threat
to the public health, safety, or welfare. Foundation walls shall be
maintained plumb and free from open breaks and shall be kept in such
condition so as to discourage the entry of rodents and other pests.
Exterior walls shall be free from large holes, breaks, and large areas
of rotted materials.
(2) Exterior doors, door assemblies, and hardware shall be maintained
in good functioning condition. Exterior windows shall be maintained
in a sufficient condition to prevent the ready access of water, vermin,
insects, and other animals, and shall not present an undue danger
of bodily injury as a result of broken glass.
(3) All residential rental units shall be served with running water and
functioning wastewater collection. Plumbing fixtures shall be properly
installed and maintained in working order and shall be kept free from
obstruction, leaks, and defects and be capable of performing the function
for which such fixtures are designed. Fixtures shall be maintained
in a safe, sanitary, and functional condition, and shall be properly
connected to either a public water system or to an approved private
water system and shall also be properly connected to either a public
or private wastewater system or to an approved private sewage disposal
system.
(4) Electrical and gas systems must present no hazard to the occupants
of the structure. Equipment, wiring, and appliances shall be properly
installed and maintained in a safe and approved manner. Flexible electric
cords shall not be used for permanent wiring, or for running through
doors, windows, or cabinets, or concealed within walls, floors, or
ceilings.
(5) The roof shall be sound, tight, and free of defects that admit rain
in an amount that causes or may cause deterioration of the walls or
roof structure. The roof must be free of significant signs of deterioration,
fatigue, or rotting; must have proper anchorage; and must be capable
of supporting all nominal loads.
(b) Designation of unfit dwellings.
This provision applies
only to vacant dwellings or dwelling units. The designation of dwellings
or dwelling units as unfit for human habitation and the procedure
for declaring unfit and placarding of such unfit dwellings or dwelling
units shall be carried out in compliance with the following requirements:
(1) Placarding unfit dwellings.
The inspector may declare
as unfit and placard any dwelling or dwelling unit which is found
to have any of the following defects:
(A) One which is so damaged, decayed, dilapidated, unsanitary, unsafe,
or vermin-infested that it creates a serious hazard to the health
or safety of the occupants or of the public.
(B) One which lacks illumination, ventilation, or sanitation facilities
adequate to protect the health or safety of the occupants or of the
public.
(C) One which because of its general condition or location is unsanitary
or otherwise dangerous to the health or safety of the occupants or
of the public.
(2) Reuse of unfit dwellings.
No dwelling or dwelling unit
which has been declared as unfit for human habitation and placarded
shall again be used for human habitation until written approval is
secured from and such placard is removed by the city. The city shall
remove such placard whenever the defect or defects upon which the
condemnation and placarding action were based have been eliminated.
(3) Defacing or removing placard.
No person shall deface
or remove the placard from any dwelling or dwelling unit which has
been declared as unfit for human habitation and placarded as such,
except as provided in division (C) [sic].
(4) Hearing.
Any person affected by any notice or order
relating to the declaration and placarding of a dwelling or dwelling
unit as unfit for human habitation may request and shall be granted
a hearing on the matter before the building and standards commission
under the procedures set forth in this chapter.
(Ordinance 2018-020, sec. 2, adopted 7/23/18; 1988 Code, sec. 7-172; Ordinance 2022-028 adopted 5/9/22)
(a) Notice required.
In the event that any person owning
occupied residential rental property within the corporate limits of
the city fails or refuses to comply with the provisions of this article,
the city shall give seven (7) days’ notice of the violation
to the owner prior to taking any further legal action against the
owner.
(b) Manner of notice.
(1) The notice shall be given:
(A) Personally to the owner in writing;
(B) By letter addressed to the owner at the owner’s address as
recorded in the appraisal district records of the appraisal district
in which the property is located; or
(C) If personal service cannot be obtained or the owner’s address
is unknown:
(i)
By publication at least once;
(ii)
By posting notice on or near the front door of each building
on the property to which the violation relates; or
(iii)
By posting notice on a placard attached to a stake driven into
the ground on the property to which the violation relates.
(2) Any notice forwarded to the owner by mail as provided in subsection
(b)(1)(B) and returned by the United States Postal Service as “refused” or “unclaimed” shall not affect the validity of the notice, and the notice shall be considered as delivered.
(c) Contents of notice.
The notice shall contain:
(1) The name and address of the record owner;
(2) An identification, which is not required to be a legal description,
of the property upon which the violation is located;
(3) A statement in conformance with V.T.C.A., Local Government Code section
54.005 affording a former property owner the opportunity, by sworn
affidavit, to disavow current ownership and responsibility for the
property;
(4) A statement describing the violation and the work necessary to correct
the violation;
(5) A statement that the owner may, within five (5) days of the date
of the notice of a violation, submit a written request to the appropriate
person named in the notice for a hearing before the building and standards
commission to contest whether the violation exists; and
(6) A statement that the city may, at any time after the expiration of seven (7) days from the mailing of the notice, file a criminal misdemeanor complaint in municipal court with a maximum fine in accordance with the general penalty provided in section
1.01.009 for each day the violation exists, in addition to or in lieu of any other remedy provided by law.
(d) Hearing.
If a written request is received according to subsection
(c)(5),
a hearing shall be held before the building and standards commission. Unless the owner requests and is granted an immediate hearing and waives the right to notice, notice of the time and place of the hearing shall be sent to the owner by certified mail. At the hearing, the building and standards commission may consider all facts relating to the existence of a violation. After the hearing, the building and standards commission may determine that a violation requiring abatement does or does not exist and, if the commission determines a violation exists, issue orders requiring abatement of said violation or violations.
(Ordinance 2018-020, sec. 2, adopted 7/23/18; 1988 Code, sec. 7-173; Ordinance adopting 2021 Code; Ordinance 2022-028 adopted 5/9/22)
(a) Each individual violation of this article is hereby declared a class C misdemeanor prosecutable in the municipal court of the city, and upon adjudication of guilt thereof, any occupant, lessee, owner, lessor, agent or other person who violates, disobeys, omits, neglects or refuses to comply with or who resists the enforcement of any of the provisions of this article shall be assessed a fine for each offense in accordance with the provisions of section
1.01.009. Each day that a violation is permitted to exist shall be deemed a separate offense for which a separate fine may be assessed. Appeals from the municipal court shall be taken in the same manner as appeals from all other judgments of that court. Violations of this article are strict liability offenses subject to the defenses to prosecution set forth in this section.
(b) Upon conviction or deferred disposition, the property upon which the violation or violations occurred and which is the subject of the municipal court case shall be subject to inspection by city inspectors for a period of twenty-four (24) months after the date of conviction or the entry into an agreement for deferred disposition to determine that the property is in compliance with this article. The property owner shall be assessed a fee as set forth in the fee schedule in appendix
A of this code for each such inspection.
(c) These
inspections authorized in this article shall be at the discretion
of city code inspectors. Code inspectors shall give reasonable notice
to the owner and the residents of the property, and efforts will be
made to coordinate dates and times of inspections with the owners
and/or occupants. Failure of the owner or occupant to make the property
available for inspection will constitute a separate violation of this
article, and any violations discovered during such inspections will
be separate violations as well. Convictions and/or deferred dispositions
on new violations discovered during any twenty-four (24) month inspection
period will result in a new twenty-four (24) month period during which
the owner or occupant must make the property available for inspection.
(d)
(1) It shall be a defense to prosecution under this article that:
(A) The occupant or tenant of residential rental property failed to give
the owner reasonable notice of a violation of this article prior to
the city’s sending a violation notice to the owner; and
(B) The violation is corrected by no later than three (3) days prior
to trial on the violation to the court or no later than ten (10) days
prior to trial on the violation to a jury.
(2) For the purposes of this subsection, a reasonable notice from the
occupant or tenant to the owner shall be twenty-four (24) hours in
the case of a life- or health-threatening condition such as arcing
electricity or non-functioning plumbing and five (5) business days
in the event of non-health- or life-threatening conditions.
(e) It shall be a defense to prosecution under this article that a residential rental property lacks functioning water and sewer service if the reason for that failure is that an occupant or tenant has failed to pay a utility bill, provided that the property otherwise complies with section
4.04.003(a)(3).
(Ordinance 2018-020, sec. 2, adopted 7/23/18; 1988 Code, sec. 7-174; Ordinance adopting 2021 Code; Ordinance 2022-028 adopted 5/9/22)
The 2021 International Property Maintenance Code as adopted in article
4.02, division 9, sections
4.02.230 et seq., as amended, shall apply to all residential rental units located in historic overlay districts in the city.
(Ordinance 2022-028 adopted 5/9/22)
(a) Registration required; exemptions.
(1) No residential rental unit in a historic overlay district shall be
rented until it has been registered in accordance with the provisions
of this section.
(2) This section shall not apply to hospital units, nursing home units,
retirement home units, nor other similar units which are owned or
operated by an agency or local unit of government.
(b) Registration requirements.
No person shall hereafter
occupy, allow to be occupied, or let to another person for occupancy
any rental unit within a historic overlay district for which a rental
unit registration has not been issued by the city. An application
for registration shall be made upon forms furnished by the city for
such purpose and shall specifically require the following minimum
information:
(1) Name, address, and phone number of the property owner.
(2) The street address of the rental property and the county appraisal
district parcel number of the rental property.
(3) The number of units within the rental property.
(4) The name, phone number, and address of the person authorized to make
or order repairs or services made to the property, if in violation
of any applicable city or state codes, if the person is different
than the owner or local administrator.
(c) Manner of registration and renewal.
Registration shall
be required every two (2) years commencing upon adoption and publication
of this section. The city shall be required to mail renewal forms
to the property owner or designated local administrator on or before
March 1st of the year prior to the renewal date. Forms may be returned
by mail at the property owner or designated local administrator’s
risk to the City of Paris, Texas P.O. Box 9037 Paris, Texas 75461.
(d) Inspections.
The city shall have the right to inspect
a rental dwelling unit at the time of registration of the unit, upon
change of tenancy, and upon transfer of ownership of the property.
These inspections authorized in this article shall be at the discretion
of city code inspectors. Code inspectors shall give reasonable notice
to the owner and the residents of the property, and efforts will be
made to coordinate dates and times of inspections with the owners
and/or occupants.
(e) Transfer of property.
Every owner of a rental unit (whether
as fee owner or contract purchaser) shall be required to furnish to
the city the new owner’s name, address, and phone number before
taking possession of the rental property upon closing of the transaction.
No registration fee shall be required of the new owner when possession
takes place during the 3-year period, provided that the previous owner
has paid all registration fees and has complied with all requirements
of this subchapter and any violations of zoning, fire, or other safety
codes of the city. If any change in the type of occupancy as originally
registered is contemplated by the new owner, a new registration application
will be required.
(f) Fees.
The fees are listed in the fee schedule section
of the city code and may be altered or amended by city council.
(g) Records.
All records, files, and documents pertaining
to the rental registration and rental unit inspection program shall
be maintained by the city and made available to the public as allowed
or required by state law.
(h) Failure to grant registration; revocation, suspension, or failure
to renew registration.
(1) The city reserves the right not to register a unit unless the rental
unit or units for which registration is sought complies with the requirements
of this article.
(2) Any registration issued under this section is subject to the right,
which is hereby expressly reserved by the city, to suspend, revoke,
or fail to renew the same should the registration holder or their
agents, employees, representatives, or lessees directly or indirectly
operate or maintain the rental dwellings contrary to the provisions
of this chapter, any ordinance of the city, of any special permit
issued by the city, or the laws of the state. Provided, however, registration
shall not be suspended, revoked, or failed to be renewed if the registration
holder complies with a compliance order or orders in a timely manner.
(3) The city manager or designee shall notify, in writing, the applicant
that his or her registration has been denied or the registration holder
that his or her registration is being suspended, removed, or not renewed.
The suspension, revocation, or nonrenewal shall occur 35 days after
the date of the order or at such later date as set out in the order.
The notice shall be served by mailing a copy of the order to the property
owner and the designated local property administrator, if any, as
indicated in the records on file with the city.
(4) The registration holder or designated local administrator shall have
the right to request a hearing before the building and standards commission
by filing a written appeal from the order at the office of the city
manager’s or designee as set forth in this chapter.
(5) The decision of the building and standards commission may be appealed
by the registration holder by filing an appeal or an appropriate writ
with the district court within thirty (30) days of the date of the
order of the building and standards commission.
(Ordinance 2022-028 adopted 5/9/22)