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What's with the seven day notice?


by sommer12 in Legal, AZ
Asked 104 days ago

Why is it that landlords whether you're renting a house or apartment if you're late on your rent and made arrangement to pay the late fees with the landlord or management office they give you 7 days to come up with the rent plus the fees? I have never heard of such --------. Back east BY LAW the landlord has 3 months to collect from the tenant before they start eviction proceedings. THAT'S why when you rent either a house or apartment you put down first, last month's and the security deposit. I've been here for 15 years and I've witnessed people moving out in the middle of the night, I've never seen anything like it. To me management companies/landlords out here are heartless pieces of ----.

2 Total Answers
Answer by goinwiththeflow on Mar 22, 2008 at 12:40AM
In California, they will serve you with a THREE day notice to pay. It is what they have to do business-wise in case you do not pay as promised. If you made arrangements to pay late, then they probably won't do anything to start the eviction, IF YOU PAY.
But what happens if you don't pay, and they didn't serve you the notice? Then they have lost all that time to start the legal process.
It is a business. Landlords have mortgage payments to make too. It isn't heartless, just common sense...


Comment by sommer12 on Mar 22, 2008 at 10:52AM

that's how things are done on the west coast and southwest. do landlords or apartments ask for first and last months rent? maybe they should start, ---- people there have money don't they? If you can put down a security deposit on one of those overpriced apartments or homes you can sure as hell afford to put down first and last months rent. The reason why landlords do that is if a tenant can't pay the rent or skips out, their asses are covered, but will still go after the former tenant.

Answer by tonestar on Mar 26, 2008 at 9:15AM
Why on earth should a landlord/management company lose money because of an irresponsible tenant who can't honor the contract they signed?


Comment by sommer12 on Mar 26, 2008 at 10:09AM

obviously you didn't read my question let alone understand it did you? Try reading it first, think THEN answer the question.


Comment by tonestar on Mar 26, 2008 at 10:25AM

I most certainly read your quesiton. If you are referring to the whole "first and last month's rent" then you obviously do not understand how renting an apartment works. The first and last mont's rent is not there to cover you if you can't pay. It is there to pay the first and last month of the contract. It is not some sort of fund to draw off of when you are short on cash.

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