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What I mean is if I made a payment in certified funds, can the landlord hold that until the FULL payment is made in certified funds.
(example I paid $1000, he keeps it and wants $1500 before he gives back $1000) Also can he still charge late fees?

I thought that if they accepted a payment they couldn't still charge late fees.

I had a situation where they sent a repair guy to my house and when the guy got done fixing the problem he wanted to get paid, they sent him out without a work order and of course couldnt be reached while the guy was there. Then wanted me to submit my receipt so they could reimburse me. When I deducted the amount from my rent they said Im in default. I think they probably billed the owner too. Pretty shady outfit in my opinion.

2007-01-06 17:12:24 · 3 answers · asked by gd 1 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

3 answers

You can't be the one to decide how you will be reimburse by the landlord. Only the landlord can make that decision. In the absence of notification from the landlord allowing you to pay only the difference of what you normally pay and the amount you are getting reimbursed for, is you still have to pay the full rent. And if you didn't you are subject to late fees.

Bottom line is you are wholly responsible for paying the rent each month. The reimbursement is a completely different matter.

2007-01-06 17:48:02 · answer #1 · answered by AJ 7 · 1 0

If you made a partial payment on your rent, like you owed $1,500.00 per month and paid $1,000.00 on the first of the month and paid the final 500 on the 20th, your payment is late and he can charge you full late fees.

If a plumber comes out to the house to replace the water heater and said he need $1,000.00 or he would take it out. You paid the plumber, got reciepts, Paid $500.00 on the first and sent COPIES of the $1,000.00 bill with the rent. You should not have to pay an additional Thousand dollars or late fees. But you should have talked with the landlord before you paid for the water heater and it was agreed upon before the rent was due.

In the future, DO NOT PAY a bill unless it is agreed upon in advance. Being a good tenant to a bad landlord may have cost you.
You are entitled to reimbursement IF the landlord ordered the work. If he did not order the work, it may have been ordered for the house next door for all he knows and he may tell you he never ordered it. If he takes this course, you may not be able to get reimbursed in court. His word against yours. This may be an expensive lesson.

2007-01-06 21:57:12 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the respond is probably. based upon the place you reside, it would desire to not be resolved that a prior due fee could be utilized in any respect. California, final I checked is an unresolved state. with the aid of this I mean there is legal recourse for absolving a prior due fee. See Orozco v. Casimiro (2004). to that end the regulation is examine to verify that an eviction won't be able to be issued if a fee treatments the placement which brought about the eviction word to be filed. to that end, the previous due fee became construed to absolve the economic loss and as a effect the eviction became denied. discover a legal expert and notice if, on your state, it incredibly is very well worth the challenge. by the style, those circumstances are why many landlords are actually not charging previous due expenses yet offering value reductions. The lease reads sometihng like this: The lease is seven-hundred.00 in keeping with month yet once you pay in finished with the aid of the third, a discount of fifty.00 is utilized. a discount isn't comparable to a cost and that i comprehend of no annoying situations to it.

2016-10-30 05:26:01 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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