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Shooting on rental property.... allowed?

Reply from: Art2U
Date: 13 Sep 2007, 16:02
Shooting on rental property.... allowed?

Michigan law and photography... allowed on apartment rental?

A few days ago, I was video taping my landlord trying too get my
neighbor to answer the door (truly a nut case; the neighbor that is).

One of the landlord funkies told me that I was allowed to shoot
anything on the property because it was private property.

Is this true?

-Art- (not Art)


Reply from: wNp
Date: 14 Sep 2007, 15:51
Re: Shooting on rental property.... allowed?

On Sep 14, 12:02 am, Art2U <ar...@invalid . net > wrote:
> Michigan law and photography... allowed on apartment rental?
>
> A few days ago, I was video taping my landlord trying too get my
> neighbor to answer the door (truly a nut case; the neighbor that is).
>
> One of the landlord funkies told me that I was allowed to shoot
> anything on the property because it was private property.
>
> Is this true?
>
> -Art- (not Art)

Private as in you rent it?
The right to quiet enjoyment of rented or leases premises is part of
the concept of renting. You are in fact, the "Private" part of the
property. Your landlord is one who needs your permission to enter the
property unless of course you have breached the conditions under which
you rent it.

You have the right to quiet enjoyment of the property you rent. This
includes taking photos of it and if it is combined in a building with
other tenant's rentals, you have the right to photograph it.


Reply from: Somewhere Nowhere
Date: 14 Sep 2007, 15:52
Re: Shooting on rental property.... allowed?

On Thu, 13 Sep 2007 10:02:16 -0400, Art2U <art2U@invalid . net > wrote:

>Michigan law and photography... allowed on apartment rental?
>
>A few days ago, I was video taping my landlord trying too get my
>neighbor to answer the door (truly a nut case; the neighbor that is).
>
>One of the landlord funkies told me that I was allowed to shoot
>anything on the property because it was private property.
>
>Is this true?
>
>-Art- (not Art)

If you have the right to be there, you can take photos.

If you are on private property you can still take photos. If asked to
stop, you must.

Check this

* w w w .photoattorney . com /2006/08/10-common-misconceptions-of-law-for.html

Brian





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