I moved into a new apartment at the end of the year. It's a mother-in-law, which doesn't have a separate entrance, so I have to go through the house to enter. Today I was surprised to come home to a balls cold space. My independantly controlled heating was completely turned off, and there was a sign taped to the heater in my living room (politely worded)...requesting that I turn off the heat when I know I'll be gone for protracted periods of time.
I have several problems with this...
First off, I have things I don't want frozen.
I have a freezer for that purpose.
Secondly, I'm not interested in waiting 2 hrs for my personal space to become warm and comforting.
Thirdly, My personal effects are still in great disarray from the move, and there could be literally dozens of valuables missing, and I wouldn't know it until 6 months down the road when I go looking for it
And lastly, I want to do great bodily harm to the individual who raped my privacy, and took advantage of my absence to do so. So ballsy in fact that he left plain evidence of it. I think that takes a special kind of ballsy.
So...questions. In every state I've lived in, there were laws which protect tenants from such an intrusion of privacy. Usually a landlord can only enter under emergency conditions, or with 24 hr notice. Does Oklahoma not have such laws?
I have several problems with this...
First off, I have things I don't want frozen.
I have a freezer for that purpose.
Secondly, I'm not interested in waiting 2 hrs for my personal space to become warm and comforting.
Thirdly, My personal effects are still in great disarray from the move, and there could be literally dozens of valuables missing, and I wouldn't know it until 6 months down the road when I go looking for it
And lastly, I want to do great bodily harm to the individual who raped my privacy, and took advantage of my absence to do so. So ballsy in fact that he left plain evidence of it. I think that takes a special kind of ballsy.
So...questions. In every state I've lived in, there were laws which protect tenants from such an intrusion of privacy. Usually a landlord can only enter under emergency conditions, or with 24 hr notice. Does Oklahoma not have such laws?