Among the countless renters-vs-landlords stories shared online, many don’t end well, which is why the internet rejoiced when one fortunate California resident allegedly beat his landlord in a lawsuit. Going by Growersmokerman on Reddit, the resident posted his story on r/Renters, explaining how he had moved out of his apartment, leaving everything in a spick-and-span state. However, his landlord accused him of a host of damages and billed him $2,179.42.
“In retrospect, I should have taken photos,” Growersmokerman groaned, pointing out how the fridge the owner claimed he broke was already 30 years old and had issues. The rest of the so-called damages didn’t apply to him either, based on how he said he managed the place. However, he wasn’t going to let this landlord unjustly sue him, so he started researching how a small claims court worked.
Growersmokerman expressed how he felt “helpless and mad” because he’s never sued anyone before, and taking his landlord to court seemed “overwhelming” and very time-consuming. “ Turns out, it was much easier than I thought. And while it took 2 months of calendar time, the actual number of hours I worked on it was about 4,” he boasted. His simple solution amazed thousands of Redditors.
The ex-tenant said they paid for a product that helped them make a demand letter template for $6,000, which was 3x the amount they initially were going to ask for. “I just put my name, the landlord’s LLC, and my dollar amount and Viola!” they wrote, adding how “It’s easier than ever now, too. I used an AI tool that pretty much did all the work.”
Reddit Praised the California Tenant for Standing His Ground Against the Landlord
Numerous Redditors chimed in with their stories or remarks about how in awe they were of how easily this California resident won the lawsuit. “This is like a dream scenario,” remarked a commenter. “California landlords who operate like this deserve this,” expressed another.
“I hate when landlords can take advantage of people simply because they don’t know how or think the process is overwhelming,” wrote a third. A fourth Redditor congratulated Growersmokerman for the legal victory, saying they wanted to hear more wins from abused tenants. “More stories like this please, I’m tired of people asking for guidance and then doing nothing with the advice because it’s ‘not worth it.’”
OP admitted that they were actually very close to never seeing this $6,000 win. “I was soooo close to being one of those who almost did nothing. Saying it’s “not worth it” is a comforting lie we tell ourselves so we don’t have to deal with conflict, imo,” they shared. Yet he indeed prevailed in the end, with no small thanks to AI, which has been both rather controversial and just as helpful in situations such as these.







