Include Five Items in Your Nonpayment Stipulations to Ensure Effective Settlements

When you settle an eviction case involving nonpayment of rent, you and your resident must sign an agreement that’s reviewed and approved by the court. In a typical agreement, the resident agrees to pay back rent and charges according to a set payment schedule.

When you settle an eviction case involving nonpayment of rent, you and your resident must sign an agreement that’s reviewed and approved by the court. In a typical agreement, the resident agrees to pay back rent and charges according to a set payment schedule.

A settlement agreement or stipulation can be an efficient and practical way of resolving an eviction case. But many settlement agreements are so poorly written that they can cause problems for owners and managers later on. Too often, they consist of a few sentences jotted down in a courthouse hallway. Even when more thought is given to the settlement agreement, it’s easy for owners, managers, and attorneys to overlook key points that could prove useful later on.

We’ve identified five items you can use to better protect your settlement. And, for each of them, we’ll give you Model Language that you can adapt and use in your own agreements. Be sure to show our Model Language to an attorney in your area before using it in your agreements.

Admission and Description of Amounts Owed

Have the resident admit the total amount owed, the months for which it is owed, and the amount of rent owed for each month. If you settle before your eviction case has gone very far, you don’t want to give the resident leeway to later challenge whether he or she owed anything at all. And a detailed description of the amount(s) the resident owes you helps to clarify the total amount that he or she is agreeing to pay. Most judges require this information to be spelled out in the agreement.

If, for example, a resident of ABC Apartments owes rent of $200 per month and late fees for October, November, and December 2016, the agreement should say:

Model Language

Resident admits owing to ABC Apartments, Inc., the sum of $645, including unpaid rent for October 2016, November 2016, and December 2016 at the rate of $200 per month, plus late fees at the rate of $15 per month.

Depending on the law in your area, your claim in a nonpayment case may be limited to rent only. However, despite this constraint, parties can agree that charges due under a lease, such as late fees, security deposits, added charges, court costs, and attorney’s fees, are to be paid by the resident in return for avoiding a trial.

Method of Payment

Repayment schedules usually list the amount of each payment the resident must make and the date by which each payment must be made. But if the resident has bounced any rent checks in the past, you should specify how the resident must make the payments. Rather than worry about whether checks will bounce in the future, have the resident pay in cash or by certified check or money order.

Suppose the resident must repay $215 per month for the next three months. Here is how you might word the repayment schedule.

Model Language

Resident will make a payment of $215, by certified check, bank check, or money order, on or before Jan. 1, 2017. Resident will make a second payment of $215, by certified check or money order, on or before Feb. 1, 2017. Resident will make a third payment of $215, by certified check or money order, on or before March 1, 2017.

Owners often allow a three-day “grace period” for residents to obtain a certified check or money order after collecting salary or government benefits.

Application of Payments

Describe the way residents’ payments will be applied to current and past-due rents. State that payments will first be applied to the current month’s rent, then to the back rent still owed. This keeps you from ending up back at square one. Applying payments in this way prevents the resident from paying you only for past-due rent and then arguing that you are no longer entitled to claim the full benefit of the settlement agreement, because it concerns debts he or she no longer owes you.

For example, suppose a resident owes total back rent of $645 for the months of January, February, and March 2017 ($200 rent, plus a $15 late fee per month). The resident agrees to repay $215 per month for each of the next three months, but the settlement agreement doesn’t explain how the payments will be applied. In June 2017, the resident should pay you $415—the combined amount of the current rent payment and the scheduled payment of past-due rent and late fee.

Instead, the resident pays $215. If the resident continues doing this for three months and you then return to court, the resident may be able to convince the court that you must file an entirely new eviction case. To avoid this situation, your agreement should say:

Model Language

All payments received will be applied to current rent first and then to past-due rent and charges.

Needed Repairs

Sometimes, as a defense, residents raise the argument that they didn’t pay rent because you didn’t maintain the unit. This may result in a settlement agreement in which the resident agrees to pay back rent, but you also agree to perform the repairs that the resident claims are needed.

In these cases, it’s important to include in your agreement a detailed description of the repairs you’re responsible for. If the description is too vague, you give the resident an excuse for not following the repayment schedule—namely, that you never did the repairs.

If you’re aware of all the needed repairs, be as specific as possible about them in the settlement agreement. For example, suppose the resident claims that the front-door lock is broken. Don’t state, “Management will correct problems with the front door to the unit.” Instead, your agreement should say: “Management will replace the front-door lock.”

Default Clause

Spell out what will happen if the resident defaults—that is, doesn’t comply with the repayment schedule. Get your attorney’s advice on your legal rights if this occurs. Describing these rights in a default clause discourages the resident from viewing the settlement agreement as an easy way to avoid eviction.

What your default clause should say depends on whether your state’s law allows for the award of money judgments and/or warrants based on residents’ breach of eviction settlement agreements. If your state’s law gives you these rights, you should add the following language to the agreement:

Model Language

In the event of a default on any payment, Manager shall have the immediate right to a money judgment against Resident for the remaining amount due under this agreement, and for a judgment of possession and an eviction warrant, upon an affidavit of Manager setting forth the default.

If your state law doesn’t permit you to obtain an immediate order or judgment of any kind, you should still include a default clause that explains your right to continue with the eviction case, such as the following:

Model Language

In the event of a default on any payment, Manager shall have the right to seek the entry of a final judgment of possession and a money judgment for the remaining amount due under this agreement, and to seek a warrant of eviction.

Other Points in Your Settlement Agreement

Make sure your settlement agreement doesn’t establish a new tenancy. By signing a nonpayment agreement, the resident should not only acknowledge his obligations under the agreement but also agree to recognize all of his old obligations under the lease. State in the nonpayment settlement that “prior obligations under the lease are incorporated in the agreement and no new tenancy is established voiding those obligations.”

Also make sure the settlement agreement stipulates its duration. After the final payment under the settlement, a chronic late payer will tend to pay late again. To avoid going back to court, you might state that the nonpayment agreement “shall remain in effect for one year from the date on which it is signed, or whenever the outstanding arrearage is paid in full, whichever is later.”