Legal Question in Landlord & Tenant Law in California

Uncashed Rent Check

My landlord misfiled my september 2004 rent check and failed to cash it for over a year. I recently received a letter stating that he discovered his mistake Dec.9, 2005, and he has requested a new replacement check within 10 days, after which he will apply a late charge. My questions are these: 1) Do I still owe the debt, 2)How soon must I again pay the debt, and 3) Can he charge a late fee for a debt that has been paid once?


Asked on 12/10/05, 10:39 pm

3 Answers from Attorneys

Philip Iadevaia Law Offices of Philip A. Iadevaia

Re: Uncashed Rent Check

So, your landlord loses your rent check, does not notify you about it for over a year, then upon discoverying his accounting error, seeks the payment along with a late charge? First, you do owe the money, but a landlord cannot legally recover rent which is over 12 months past due. Therefore, you have a bargaining chip to get him to waive the late fee and interest. If he sues you for the rent and it is over 12 months past due, he will lose the lawsuit. But a suit will cost you money. Best thing is to avoid the suit, and pay the month's rent on the condition that the landlord waive the late fee in writing. Good Luck.

Read more
Answered on 12/12/05, 12:16 pm
Carl Starrett Law Offices of Carl H. Starrett II

Re: Uncashed Rent Check

(1) Yes, you stlll owe the money; (2) you should pay it at soon as possible; and (3) charging a late fee would be questionnable because it was largely the landlord's fault.

It is worth noting that you never "paid" the money and you should have known the check did not clear. You could have brought this to your landlord's attention when you were reconciling your bank statements, but you did not. Although the landlord is mostly at fault, you are not completely innocent in this.

Read more
Answered on 12/11/05, 10:04 am
Randy Schlosser Law Office of RM Schlosser

Re: Uncashed Rent Check

Yes you do owe the money and should pay it as soon as possible. However, a late fee at this junction, and due to the landlords mistake, is probably not an option. However, if the landlord applies it you will have a fight on your hands, so the best thing to do is pay ASAP.

Please note that a check is not payment, but a promise to pay. Until the check is cashed no payment was made. Please understand that if you do not pay the amount within a reasonable time, the owner may elect to evict you for non-payment of rent.

Read more
Answered on 12/11/05, 10:25 am


Related Questions & Answers

More Landlord & Tenants questions and answers in California