Indiana Code § 24-7-4-13

Acceptance and application of payments; payments exceeding scheduled amount due
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
Sec. 13. (a) Except as provided in subsection (b), a lessor may not accept payment from a lessee and hold the amount of the payment in a reserve account for future payments. Any amounts paid by a lessee must be applied: (1) as an initial rental payment; (2) as a regular rental payment; or (3) to an accrued additional charge under IC 24-7-5 .       (b) If a lessee makes a payment that exceeds the sum of the scheduled regular rental payment and any permitted additional charges that are due, the lessor may hold the excess funds in a reserve account subject to the following conditions: (1) The balance of the lessee's reserve account may not exceed the amount of the next scheduled regular rental payment. (2) If the balance in the lessee's reserve account reaches the limit specified in subdivision (1), the lessor shall apply the funds to the lessee's next scheduled regular rental payment.       (c) This section may not be construed to preclude a lessor from accepting and applying: (1) an initial rental payment; or (2) multiple regular rental payments; before the rental payments' scheduled due dates.   IC 24-7-5 Chapter 5. Additional Charges               24-7-5-1 Nonrefundable processing fee             24-7-5-2 Security deposit refunds             24-7-5-3 Delivery charges             24-7-5-4 Rental payment pickup charges             24-7-5-5 Late charges or delinquency fees             24-7-5-5.5 Returned payment fee             24-7-5-6 Reinstatement fee             24-7-5-7 Sales and use taxes             24-7-5-8 Official fees             24-7-5-10 Liability of lessee for replacement cost of leased property; fair market value             24-7-5-11 Liability damage waivers; fee; prohibitions and requirements             24-7-5-12 Fee for accepting rental payments by telephone

‹ Prev All Indiana sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.