¶ 11. According to your letter, “some residential leases in Wisconsin contain clauses requiring the tenant to pay for the cost of cleaning the carpet upon termination of the tenancy regardless of whether the tenant has damaged the carpet due to willful or negligent use.” The question posed by your letter is whether such clauses are permissible under the statutes cited above.
¶ 12. You indicate that DATCP has taken the position that such carpet cleaning clauses are unlawful, relying on a letter authored by an Assistant Attorney General in 2001. That letter concluded that the carpet cleaning provisions of the type at issue here impermissibly waive a landlord’s statutory obligation to keep the rental unit in a reasonable state of repair, by shifting the landlord’s responsibility to the tenant. According to the letter, such provisions render residential rental agreements void.
¶ 13. You question the validity of this conclusion, and request that the Department of Justice revisit this question.
¶ 14. The dispositive question is whether the routine cleaning of carpet falls within the sphere of obligations statutorily assigned to landlords. If so, the law clearly provides that the obligation may not be reassigned to the tenant. If not, it may be validly assigned to the tenant in a residential rental agreement.
¶ 15. Chapter 704 does not supply a definition of the term “repair,” as it appears in Wis. Stat. § 704.07(2)(a). However, in ordinary usage the term “repair” is distinct from “cleaning.” For example, the Merriam-Webster online dictionary defines “repair” as “to restore by replacing a part or putting together what is torn or broken.” (The Merriam-Webster Dictionary, “repair,” Entry 3 (1)(a), http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/repair .) The American Heritage Dictionary similarly defines “repair” as “[t]o restore to sound condition after damage or injury; fix.” (The American Heritage Dictionary 1047 (2nd ed. 1982).) While a carpet that is ripped might be said to need repair, a carpet that is merely dirty and needs cleaning would normally not be considered in need of “repair.” ¶ 16. Further, although the statutes do not define “repair,” the manner in which the term is used in various statutory provisions supports the conclusion that “repair” involves fixing something that is broken or not functioning properly, and does not include simply cleaning something that is dirty. In fact, the section of the statutes at issue, Wis. Stat. § 704.07, itself contains the following language in conjunction with the term “repair” (emphases added): “repairs made necessary by the negligence of, or improper use of the premises by, the tenant” (Wis. Stat. § 704.07(2)); “[k]eep in a reasonable state of repair all equipment under the landlord’s control necessary to supply services that the landlord has expressly or impliedly agreed to furnish to the tenant, such as heat, water, elevator, or air conditioning” (Wis. Stat. § 704.07(2)2.); “repair or replace any plumbing, electrical wiring, machinery, or equipment furnished with the premises and no longer in reasonable working condition” (Wis. Stat. § 704.07(2)4.). Subsections (3) and (4) similarly use the term repair in connection with portions of the premises that are broken, non-functional or dangerous. ¶ 17. It is apparent from the statutes and accepted usage that the term “repair” does not extend to routine cleaning. Thus cleaning carpets at the end of a tenancy does not fall within the sphere of duties assigned to landlords by Wis. Stat. § 704.07(2). Because carpet cleaning is not a landlord’s legally-prescribed duty, including a provision in a residential rental agreement requiring the tenant to have carpets professionally cleaned does not waive the landlord’s legal obligation.
¶ 18. On this point, I disagree with the 2001 letter discussed above. That letter erroneously assumed that the responsibility of routine carpet cleaning must be statutorily assigned to either the landlord or the tenant, and could not be shifted from the former to the latter by contract. As discussed above, the statute is silent with regard to the imposition of cleaning responsibilities, as distinct from repairs, leaving the parties free to assign responsibilities through lease provisions.
¶ 19. In light of my conclusion that the statutes do not compel landlords to engage in routine carpet cleaning, the presence of a provision requiring tenants to do so does not render such a residential rental agreement void and unenforceable pursuant to Wis. Stat. §§ 704.07(1) or 704.44(8). ¶ 20. Finally, I note that the permissibility of provisions requiring tenants to arrange or pay for carpet cleaning at the termination of their tenancy does not mean that landlords can deduct carpet cleaning charges from the security deposit of a tenant who has failed to comply with such a provision. Under your agency’s present rule, ATCP § 134.06(3)(c), landlords are expressly prohibited from withholding security deposits “for normal wear and tear, or for other damages or losses for which the tenant cannot reasonably be held responsible under applicable law.” The accompanying note cites carpet cleaning as an example of an impermissible basis for withholding a portion of a security deposit. My conclusion that carpet cleaning provisions are valid does not affect the prohibition against deducting carpet cleaning expenses from a tenant’s security deposit as a means of enforcing such provisions. Sincerely,
J.B. VAN HOLLEN
Attorney General
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