4732 Washington Apartments, Inc. v. Creedon

162 F.2d 416, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2957
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1947
DocketNo. 395
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 162 F.2d 416 (4732 Washington Apartments, Inc. v. Creedon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Emergency Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
4732 Washington Apartments, Inc. v. Creedon, 162 F.2d 416, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2957 (eca 1947).

Opinion

McAllister, Judge.

Complainant corporation is the owner of an apartment building in Chicago, containing 30 rented units. On September 29, 1942, the corporation filed a registration statement showing that a certain apartment unit was rented as an unfurnished apartment at a rental of $34 per month on the date on which maximum rents were established in Chicago, namely, March 1, 1942.

Two days after this registration statement was filed, the subject unit was rented furnished at a rental of $47.50 per month. No ■petition had been filed to increase the maximum rent for a furnished apartment in excess of the amount of $34 per month which was theretofore the maximum rent for the apartment, unfurnished. In order to secure an increase of rental for a furnished apartment over the established maximum rent for [417]*417the same apartment, unfurnished, it was necessary, by regulation, to file a petition for adjustment of rental upward.

Approximately two years after the renting of the furnished apartment at the monthly rental of $47.50, officials of the Chicago branch of the Office of Price Administration learned that the apartment was being rented on a furnished basis, and that there was some doubt about its having been registered. Accordingly, complainant was requested in writing either to register the property or notify the Area Office within five days that the apartment had been previously registered. Complainant did not reply to this letter, but five months later, on September 22, 1944, it filed a second registration statement showing that on October 1, 1942, the apartment had been rented furnished for $47.50 per month. This registration statement failed to disclose that the apartment unit had been rented on the maximum rent date. To the local office, this registration statement indicated that the monthly rent being received was a “first rent,” that is, that the apartment had not been rented on the maximum rent date but had thereafter been rented for the amount of $47.50 per month — which would, in such a case, be the maximum rent for the premises, unless thereafter reduced by the Administrator on the ground that it was above the rents generally prevailing for comparable accommodations on the maximum rent date. It was, therefore, apparently assumed by the Area Office that the monthly rental of $47.50 was the proper and established legal maximum rent for the premises in question. This, of course was not the case.

Shortly after this second registration of the apartment unit on September 22, 1944, complainant filed a petition with the Rent Director, pursuant to the Regulation, requesting an order permitting elimination of the cleaning, decorating, and gas and electric services provided with the furnished apartment. In this petition, complainant represented that the maximum rent for the accommodations was $47.50’ per month. This was erroneous. The Rent Director, finding that the rental value of the services to be decreased amounted to $8.50 per month, and relying upon the representation in the petition that the current maximum rent was $47.50 per month, accordingly entered an order, on February 21, 1945, reciting that the maximum rent was thereby reduced from $47.50 to $39 per month. In April, 1945, complainant filed another petition pursuant to the pertinent provisions of the Regulation, requesting restoration of the amount of $8.50, prospectively, on the ground that it proposed to restore the services which it had been permitted to eliminate. This petition was denied for the reason that complainant had not obtained the tenant’s consent to such restoration or increase in services, as required by the Regulation. Thereafter, complainant again sought the upward adjustment in rental on the ground that the services had never in fact been eliminated.

While this latter claim was pending, the Rent Director learned from other sources that the apartment in question had been rented unfurnished on the maximum rent date, and that, therefore, the maximum rent of $47.50 — on a furnished basis — as disclosed by the second registration, was improper. Proceedings were, therefore, instituted by the issuance of notices, to which complainant responded, and the Rent Director then found that the difference in rental value of the accommodations by reason of the change from an unfurnished to a furnished apartment, and the addition of the services of gas and electricity was $12.50 per month, which, when added to the rent of $34 received on the maximum rent date, resulted in a maximum rent of $46.50 per month for the furnished apartment. An order was accordingly entered by the Rent Director establishing the maximum rent for the furnished apartment at $46.50 per month. On review by the Regional Administrator, this order was in all matters here pertinent sustained, except that the maximum rent was increased, prospectively, $1 to $47.50 per month. A protest was then filed by complainant requesting the Administrator to revoke all prior orders, and to establish the maximum rent for the furnished apartment at $47.50 per month, retroactively to October 1, 1942.

The order of the Rent Director had established a maximum rent of $39 for the period from February 21, 1945 to December 4, 1945, based upon an assumed furnished [418]*418rental, less $8.50 for decreases in services; and during the period, from December 4, 1945 to May 31, 1946, the maximum rent had been fixed at $46.50 (later increased by the Regional Administrator to $47.50), representing the unfurnished rental of March 1, 1943 of $34 plus an allowance of $12.50 for services, furniture, and1 furnishings.

In the protest proceedings, the Administrator found that no upward adjustment of the rent, as established on the maximum rent date at $34 was warranted for any period of time prior to February 21, 1945, the date of the Rent Director’s first order, on the ground of any addition of furniture and furnishings, inasmuch as no petition for adjustment had been filed during such period and no equitable considerations had been demonstrated to exist requiring such extraordinary relief. Upon the entry of the Administrator’s order denying the protest, the present complaint was filed.

Complainant, first contends that when the Rent Director entered the order .on February 21, 1945, reducing the rent for the apartment from $47.50 to $39 per month, he thereby found that the legal maximum rent for the apartment as furnished was $4-7.50 per month; that the tenant received and used the apartment as furnished with all services from October 1, 1942 to the date of the hearing on the complaint; and, since the Price Administrator found that $47.50 per month was a proper rental for such premises furnished, that the legal maximum rent for the apartment had been $47.50 per month from October 1, 1942 to the date of the hearing of the complaint.

We are unable to agree with these views. On March 1, 1942, the maximum rent date, the apartment in question was rented as an unfurnished" unit for $34 per month. On the effective date of the Regulation,1 July 1, 1942, such rent became the maximum rent and remained so, unless and until changed by the Administrator.2 No petition was filed and no order was issued changing such maximum rent until February 21,1945. At the time these accommodations were first rented on a furnished basis, there were no provisions permitting a landlord to increase the rentals on his own initiative over those established on the maximum rent date, because of a change from an unfurnished apartment to one that was furnished.

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Related

Heaney v. United States
132 Ct. Cl. 364 (Court of Claims, 1955)
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176 F.2d 544 (Tenth Circuit, 1949)
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77 F. Supp. 559 (D. Maine, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
162 F.2d 416, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/4732-washington-apartments-inc-v-creedon-eca-1947.