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- Newsgroups: misc.consumers
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!att!mcdchg!tellab5!chrz
- From: chrz@tellabs.com (Peter Chrzanowski)
- Subject: Re: Can a landlord refuse cash?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan5.233925.4887@tellab5.tellabs.com>
- Summary: Why not?
- Sender: news@tellab5.tellabs.com (News)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: tellab3
- Organization: Tellabs, Inc.
- References: <CONKLIN.93Jan4174514@talisman.kaleida.com>
- Date: Tue, 5 Jan 1993 23:39:25 GMT
- Lines: 45
-
- In article <CONKLIN.93Jan4174514@talisman.kaleida.com>, conklin@kaleida.com (J.T. Conklin) writes:
-
- > I received a notice with my rent statement indicating that as of the
- > next rent period, only personal cheques, cashier's cheques, and money
- > orders will be accepted for rent payments --- cash will no longer be
- > accepted.
-
- > Is this legal?
-
- I don't see why not, unless the lease or local ordinance says otherwise.
- After all, bus drivers don't have to accept dollar bills. The statement on
- currency about "debts public or private" would apply only if a debt existed
- but there would be no debt if the rent (like busfare) were payable in advance.
-
- I could contract to sell my car for a specified amount of gold bullion, or
- of pork bellies, or in exchange for a mint-condition 1939 Superman comic.
- That would not mean I'd offered to exchange my car for cash, however, even if
- the cash would be sufficient to buy the gold, or pork, or the Superman comic.
-
- Similarly, the landlord could probably demand payment in Hershey bars --
- perhaps with the restriction that you must be provided 30 days notice.
-
- If you rent month-to-month (no lease) the landlord can, in most places, evict
- you (without giving any reason) on 30 days notice. If you have a lease
- that document should explain both parties' duties and obligations. Many
- municipalities have ordinances restricting what landlords and/or tenants
- may do, however.
-
- > many of the people in my complex do not have bank accounts.
- > They cash their social security cheques and pay their rents
- > in cash. Forcing someone who is living on a tight budget to buy money
- > orders seems unfair to me.
-
- I have to admit that I've never understood why it's considered so difficult
- for poor people to maintain checking accounts. I was poor for many years
- and was always able to find a bank that offered low cost (no minimum,
- no monthly fee, perhaps 10 cents for each check) checking. Of course
- Unca Sam will direct-deposit Social Security payments on request.
-
- Dealing exclusively in cash has serious drawbacks. If you don't get a
- receipt for the rent (or whatever) you can't prove you paid it. By carrying
- a large wad of cash you make yourself an attractive target to robbers;
- poor neighborhoods always seem to have scum who are particularly active
- in seeking victims just after the government checks come out.
-
-