Paying rent
Notas finales
This section describes some of your rights and protections around paying rent, including what to do if you pay rent late, if your landlord and you disagree about how much rent you owe, and stopping an eviction due to non-payment or late payment of rent.
Endnotes
9 . G.L. c. 186, §15B(1)(c) ("No lease . . . shall impose any interest or penalty for failure to pay rent until thirty days after such rent shall have been due."); G.L. c. 93A, §2; 940 C.M.R. §3.17(3)(a)(3) and (6).
10 . G.L. c. 186, §15B(1)(c); G.L. c. 93A, §2; 940 C.M.R. §3.17(3)(a)(3) and (6).
11 . G.L. c. 186, §15B(1)(c); G.L. c. 93A, §2; 940 C.M.R. §3.17(6)(a).
12 . G.L. c. 186, §15B(1)(c); G.L. c. 93A; 940 C.M.R. §3.17(6)(a). Also, you cannot be charged a constable's or other fee for service of a notice to quit for rent that is less than 30 days late. Commonwealth v. Chatham Development Co. , Inc., 49 Mass. App. Ct. 525, 527 (2000) ($2,000 in civil penalties and $8,000 in attorney fees assessed under G.L. c. 93A for unlawful lease provision, including late fee charges for payments less than 30 days late); Copley Management v. Andersen , Boston Housing Court, 89-SP-52386 (Kerman, J., May 3, 1991).
13 . G.L. c. 186, §15B(1)(c) states that "[n]o lease . . . shall impose any interest or penalty for failure to pay rent until thirty days after such rent shall have been due." See Patriquin v. Atamian, Boston Housing Court , SP-19648-K (King, J., Aug. 27, 1981) (noting that such a discount clause "appears to be, in substance, a late fee charge which is prohibited by G.L. c. 186, §15B(1)(c) .").
14 . Whether a landlord accepts payment in full and waives (or reserves) her right to dispute the rent is a question of fact that depends on the circumstances of each case. Your landlord may attempt to reject your offer of payment in full: (a) by refusing to accept or cash your check or (b) by cashing the check but subject to a “reservation of rights” to continue to dispute the rent owed. Your landlord must notify you that she is reserving her rights to continue to dispute the rent owed before or at the time you make the rent payment. Whitehouse Rest., Inc. v. Hoffman , 320 Mass. 183, 186 (1946).
15 . To be effective, a reservation of rights must be communicated to you either before or at the time your check is accepted. If a landlord writes a reservation of rights on the back of your rent check but you could not know about this until after the check is cashed and the cancelled check is returned to you by the bank, the reservation may not be valid. For example compare Whitehouse Rest., Inc. , 320 Mass. at 186 (where a landlord merely endorses rent checks “received not for rent, but for use and occupancy, the reservation was ineffective because it could not be communicated “seasonably” in the course of banking business) with Ullian et al. v. Les Tuileries, Inc. , 361 Mass. 863 (1972) (acceptance of rent by landlord did not operate as waiver since landlord gave timely notice that they did not intend to waive their rights); see also Mastrullo v. Ryan , 328 Mass. 621, 624 (1952) (notwithstanding written reservation of rights on rent receipt, equivocal conduct by a landlord with respect to payment and reservation of rights created a triable issue on whether there was a waiver).
16 . G.L. c. 186, §§11 - 12
17 . G.L. c. 186, §12. However, your deadline to cure is extended to the date the Answer to the Summons and Complaint is due if the notice to terminate your tenancy at will does not contain the statutory right to cure language. G.L. c. 186, §12.
21 . Compare language of G.L. c. 186, §11 (no limit on number of times tenant can cure a non-payment by the answer date if there is a lease) with G.L. c. 186, §12. (if a tenant at will, right to cure “within ten days after the receipt” of a 14-day notice to quit expressly limited to once in 12 month period). And according to the Uniform Summary Process Rule 2, you cannot be served with an eviction complaint until after the expiration of your tenancy by the 14-day notice to quit.
22 . G.L. c. 186, §11. Cf. Springfield Hous. Auth. v. Oldham-King , 12 Mass. App. Ct. 935 (1981) (tenant not obligated to pay cost of suit because lease language waived statutory entitlement to costs under G.L. c. 186, §11).
24 . Woods v. Jeffrey , Boston Housing Court No. 14H84-SP-5265 (Muirhead, J., Jan. 15, 2015) (action dismissed where only notice to quit served on tenant was a 14-day notice to quit for nonpayment of rent but the complaint for eviction was brought based on chronic late payment).
25 . Massachusetts law requires a 14-day notice to terminate a tenancy for non-payment of rent whether the tenancy is under a lease or a tenancy at will (no lease). See G.L. c. 186, §§11 -12 . Massachusetts law also requires a 30-day (or rental period ) notice to terminate a tenancy at will for any reason other than non-payment of rent. See G.L. c. 186, §§12-13 There is, however, no state law that requires a 30-day notice to terminate a lease for any reason other than non-payment of rent. Typically, it is the lease that will say what type of notice of termination is required and what reasons other than nonpayment of rent, if any, are permissible grounds for terminating a lease before it expires.
28 . G.L. c. 183A, §6(c). (“…The organization shall have a continuing right to collect any rent otherwise payable by the tenant to such unit owner.... or otherwise to seek and obtain an order requiring the tenant in such unit or tenants in other units owned by the unit owner in the condominium to pay to the organization rent otherwise due to the unit owner”).