Landlords: Don’t Invest Your Security Deposits in Bitcoin

By Kimberly Rau, MassLandlords, Inc.

A Massachusetts renter came to Reddit in early June with a wild story: their landlord was withholding almost half of their security deposit after investing it in the cryptocurrency Bitcoin.

This image is of a graph showing Bitcoin’s value fluctuation over one day. The trademark symbol for Bitcoin is superimposed over the graph.

Bitcoin’s value fluctuates all over the place, making it an aggressive (risky) investment, and not a suitable market for someone’s security deposit, which must be in an interest-bearing account.

“I emailed and asked for a list of the expenses that were incurred that resulted in the lesser deposit and they told me yesterday that they had held the money in a ‘money market’ account and it had lost value over the year,” the tenant wrote in the subreddit r/legaladvice. “I called them immediately and asked what brokerage they had used…after some heated prying, they finally admitted that they had put the deposit into bitcoin, via [Bank of America’s] exchange.”

The tenant, who posted under the username Time-Calligrapher249, said the initial deposit was $3,000, the equivalent of a month’s rent. The landlord attempted to return just over $1,600 of it, claiming the rest was lost in the volatile fluctuations of Bitcoin’s value.

Of course, this is illegal in the bay state. In Massachusetts, the laws governing security deposits are ironclad. The deposit belongs to your tenant, not you, and must be placed in an interest-bearing account in the tenant’s name. If you are going to withhold any of it, you must provide a detailed breakdown of deductions. Repairs due to reasonable wear and tear don’t count. And neither do losses in cryptocurrency (or any other investment).

Security Deposit Errors may Mean Triple Damages

If this story is true, then this landlord has made a serious mistake, both in the manner in which they handled their tenant’s money and in deciding to withhold any of it without documentation of damages. Their tenant could take them to court and could easily receive triple damages plus attorney’s fees for the blunder.

Responses on Reddit urged the tenant to send their landlord a letter and, if they did not get the rest of their deposit, take the landlord to court.

“If he were my client, I would tell him to pay,” wrote user BenEsq, who stated they were a Massachusetts-based attorney with experience in housing court. “Immediately.” The tenant edited their original post to state they were planning on sending their landlord a letter demanding the rest of their security deposit, and threatening legal action if it was not returned.

We attempted to reach out to the author of the original post, but received no response. Anything on Reddit should be taken with a grain of salt, of course. But this can still serve as a cautionary tale to landlords. Make sure you know the laws surrounding security deposits, and understand how to keep yourself out of court over errors.

And don’t invest other people’s money in Bitcoin.

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