If the tenant fails to comply with any portion of CTC §
12.10.150 or §
12.10.160, and such noncompliance can affect the health and safety of the tenant or other tenants, or substantially increase the hazards of fire or accident that can be remedied by repair, replacement of a damaged item, or cleaning, the tenant shall comply within 30 days after written notice by the landlord specifying the noncompliance or, in the case of emergency, as promptly as conditions require. If the tenant fails to remedy the noncompliance within that period, the landlord may enter the dwelling unit and cause the work to be done and submit an itemized bill of the actual and reasonable cost of repair, to be payable on the next date when periodic rent is due, or on terms mutually agreed to by the landlord and tenant, or immediately if the rental agreement has terminated. Any noncompliance by the tenant with CTC §
12.10.150 or §
12.10.160 shall constitute a ground for commencing an action of unlawful detainer in accordance with Chapter
12.15 CTC, Eviction Procedures, and a landlord may commence such action at any time after written notice pursuant to such chapter. The tenant shall have a defense to an unlawful detainer action filed solely on this ground if it is determined at the hearing authorized under the provisions of Chapter
12.15 CTC, Eviction Procedures, that the tenant is in substantial compliance with the provisions of this section, or if the tenant remedies the noncomplying condition within the 30-day period provided for above or any shorter period determined at the hearing to have been required because of an emergency; provided, that if the defective condition is remedied after the commencement of an unlawful detainer action, the tenant may be liable to the landlord for statutory costs and reasonable attorneys' fees.
If drug-related criminal activity or other criminal activity that imminently threatens health, safety, or the right to peaceable enjoyment of neighboring properties is alleged to be a basis for termination of tenancy under CTC §
12.10.150(F), the compliance provisions of this section do not apply and the landlord may proceed directly to an unlawful detainer action.
If activity on the premises that creates an imminent hazard to the physical safety of other persons on the premises as defined in CTC §
12.10.150(H) is alleged to be the basis for termination of the tenancy, and the tenant is arrested as a result of this activity, then the compliance provisions of this section do not apply and the landlord may proceed directly to an unlawful detainer action against the tenant who was arrested for this activity.
A landlord may not be held liable in any cause of action for bringing an unlawful detainer action against a tenant for drug-related activity or for creating an imminent hazard to the physical safety of others under this section if the unlawful detainer action was brought in good faith. Nothing in this section shall affect a landlord's liability to pay damages sustained by the tenant should the writ of restitution be wrongfully sued out.
(Prior code § 10.2.1.190; Res. 1995-10; Res. 2006-63; Res. 2011-020; Res. 2016-17)