Legal Question in Landlord & Tenant Law in California

Can I evict my tenant after 3 late payments of the rent and late fees?

My tenant signed a one-year residential lease based on which the rent is due on the first of the month and a late fee of $50 is due on the 6th day of the month, and a $10 late fee for every additional day that the rent is not paid up to a maximum of $200. My tenant pays the rent 10 or 15 days rent and has not paid me any late fees. Can I have the tenant evicted? Thank you.


Asked on 4/13/13, 8:09 am

3 Answers from Attorneys

Kelvin Green The Law Office of Kelvin Green

Your late fee may be unreasonable

A rental agreement cannot include a pre-determined late fee. the exception to this rule is when it would be difficult to figure out the actual cost to the landlord caused by the late rent payment. even then, the pre-determined late fee should not be more than a reasonable estimate of costs that the landlord will face as a result of the late payment. A late fee that is so high that it amounts to a penalty is not legally valid (http://www.dca.ca.gov/publications/landlordbook/living-in.shtml#latefees)

So it depends on what your reasonable costs you incur are. Going to court in an unlawful detainer and eviction process you may look unreasonable; you may lose... You may want to talk with apartment owners association to see what may be reasonable here

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Answered on 4/13/13, 3:55 pm
Robert F. Cohen Law Office of Robert F. Cohen

If the tenant does not pay on the due date next month, you might the very next day serve upon the tenant a 3-day notice to pay or quit for the rent due, only. (Prepare it in advance.) If the tenant does not catch up by day 4, then don't accept rent and file an unlawful detainer. As Mr. Green suggests, seeking your late payment penalty at that time might be more trouble than it's worth.

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Answered on 4/14/13, 3:32 am

I agree with Mr. Cohen and Mr. Green and write just to clarify. You cannot evict for non-payment of fees, especially if they are too high to be legal (I'm not sure I agree with Mr. Green that yours are, depending on what your daily interest is on your mortgage on the property, and what late fees you are charged on the loan - he is right that the late fee you charge must be a good faith ballpark estimate of your losses/expenses of late payment). So if your tenant is current on the rent, you cannot evict. Mr. Cohen is correct, too, however, that once the rent is past due, you do not have to wait any longer to issue a 3-day notice to pay rent or quit (rent ONLY, you cannot include any other charges, such as late fees). If the rent is not paid in the 3 days, you are under no obligation to accept the rent and may proceed with the eviction lawsuit.

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Answered on 4/14/13, 4:25 pm


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