What is the name of your state (Arizona)?
My father is a landlord of a tenant whose lease converted to a month to month lease after being there a year. This was several years ago and it has proceeded on a month to month basis since. This tenant is consistently late on payment, sometimes by months, and my dad feels bad charging the late fees, so hasn't. Technically, they owe thousands of dollars in late fees to my father, but he feels bad trying to collect.
Last month, he decided to raise the rent closer to market value by $45 and sent them a certified letter advising of such. In that letter, he also let them know that as of March 1st, he would begin charging late fees associated with any past due rent going forward.
For whatever reason, he also erroneously mentioned, since they are a month past due already, that come February 29th... all rent is to be current. His point was, come February 29th, if rent is not current, starting the next day, March 1st, late fees would now be charged because he has never charged them in the past according to the original lease agreement.
He is now worried, because, they never paid January, he has a feeling they won't pay on Monday (February 1st) because the wording in that certified rental increase letter sent, referencing that they are to be current by February 29th, seemingly gives them until then to get everything current when January's rent was due on the first and went unpaid, and February's rent is due this coming Monday and will most likely go unpaid as usual.
In the state of Arizona, the day after rent is unpaid, landlords are able to send a 5-day Letter to Pay before they can take the next step in the eviction process. He does not want to give them until February 29th, two months seemingly free, to wait to see if they make everything current.
My question is:
1.) Is that letter binding? Is he now required to allow them to go two months with unpaid rent because he made an error with the February 29th wording on the Rent Increase Letter?
or
2) Can he start the eviction process by just sending them the 5-day Letter to Pay because they are now nearly a month overdue and about to be two months overdue?
Thanks
My father is a landlord of a tenant whose lease converted to a month to month lease after being there a year. This was several years ago and it has proceeded on a month to month basis since. This tenant is consistently late on payment, sometimes by months, and my dad feels bad charging the late fees, so hasn't. Technically, they owe thousands of dollars in late fees to my father, but he feels bad trying to collect.
Last month, he decided to raise the rent closer to market value by $45 and sent them a certified letter advising of such. In that letter, he also let them know that as of March 1st, he would begin charging late fees associated with any past due rent going forward.
For whatever reason, he also erroneously mentioned, since they are a month past due already, that come February 29th... all rent is to be current. His point was, come February 29th, if rent is not current, starting the next day, March 1st, late fees would now be charged because he has never charged them in the past according to the original lease agreement.
He is now worried, because, they never paid January, he has a feeling they won't pay on Monday (February 1st) because the wording in that certified rental increase letter sent, referencing that they are to be current by February 29th, seemingly gives them until then to get everything current when January's rent was due on the first and went unpaid, and February's rent is due this coming Monday and will most likely go unpaid as usual.
In the state of Arizona, the day after rent is unpaid, landlords are able to send a 5-day Letter to Pay before they can take the next step in the eviction process. He does not want to give them until February 29th, two months seemingly free, to wait to see if they make everything current.
My question is:
1.) Is that letter binding? Is he now required to allow them to go two months with unpaid rent because he made an error with the February 29th wording on the Rent Increase Letter?
or
2) Can he start the eviction process by just sending them the 5-day Letter to Pay because they are now nearly a month overdue and about to be two months overdue?
Thanks
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