Bowman v. Bowles

140 F.2d 974, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 4092
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1944
DocketNo. 88
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 140 F.2d 974 (Bowman v. Bowles) 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
Bowman v. Bowles, 140 F.2d 974, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 4092 (eca 1944).

Opinion

LAWS, Judge.

This case involves the application to complainants’ housing accommodations in Cincinnati, Ohio, of rent regulations established by the Price Administrator pursuant to the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, SO U.S.C.A. § 901 et seq. At the time this proceeding was commenced, two principal rent regulations were effective in the Cincinnati Defense-Rental Area. One, designated Rent Regulation for Housing (referred to in this opinion as the Housing Regulation), provided control over rents for housing accommodations other than hotels and rooming houses; the other, designated Rent Regulation for Hotels and Rooming Houses (referred to in this opinion as the Hotel Regulation), controlled rents for hotels and rooming houses.1 These Regulations imposed the maximum [976]*976rent date method of rent control.2 They became “effective in the Cincinnati Area on November 1, 1942, and established March 1, 1942, as the maximum rent date.3

Complainants are managing operators of a building in Cincinnati known as the Rose-dale Apartments which they claim has been operated for approximately ten years as an apartment hotel. After establishment of the Rent Regulations by the Administrator, complainants filed registration statements under the Housing Regulation for each of the thirty-two rental units in their building. In their registration statements complainants set forth the rent charged for each apartment on the maximum rent date and, in addition, what they describe as a sliding scale of rents. This scale provided higher weekly and rrjonthly rates for each apartment when rented on a temporary basis than it provided for rental on a long term basis and also provided increased rates when an apartment was let to occupants beyond a specified number. After registering their accommodations, complainants were informed by letter from the Office of the Area Rent Director of the Office of Price Administration that the Housing Regulation made no allowance for a sliding scale of rents, and therefore, regardless of the term of occupancy or the number of occupants, the rent charged for each unit on the maximum rent date was the highest which might legally be charged.4 By this letter complainants were advised that they might maintain a sliding scale of rents only by electing, with the consent of the Area Rent Director, to come within the Hotel Regulation; however, no assurance was given that consent would be granted if such an election were made.

The Hotel Regulation, which permits a sliding scale of rents for housing units subject to its control, provides, by Section 1 (e),5 that a landlord may, with the consent of the Administrator, elect to register under the Hotel Regulation all accommodations in his building, if, while not coming within the definitions of a hotel or a rooming house, it contains one or more furnished accommodations rented on a daily, weekly, or monthly basis. The Section further provides that the Administrator shall consent to such election if he finds the provisions of the Hotel Regulation to be better adapted to the rental practices for such building than the provisions of the Housing Regulation. Pursuant to this provision, complainants, apparently conceding that their building did not come within the definitions of a hotel or rooming house,6 prepared a registration statement for their housing accommodations under the Hotel Regulation and submitted it to the Area Rent Director, with a statement of their election to register the accommodations under the Hotel Regulation. After considering this proposed registration, the Area Rent Director found that the provisions of the Housing Regulation were better adapted to the rental practices for the building than the provisions of the Hotel Regulation and he refused to consent to complainants’ election. Upon application [977]*977for review, the Regional Administrator affirmed the Area Rent Director’s order, whereupon complainants filed a protest before the Administrator, requesting that the orders previously made be reversed and that the Area Rent Director be ordered to consent to the registration of the Rosedale Apartments under the Hotel Regulation. The Administrator denied the protest and the complaint in this Court was filed.

In this Court complainants have not confined themselves to their claim of right to register under the Hotel Regulation. In their brief and at the oral argument of this case they have taken the position that if it is decided that their election to register within the Hotel Regulation was properly denied by the Administrator, this Court should grant alternative relief by construing the Housing Regulation as permitting a sliding scale of rents. The right of this Court to make such a construction in the present case depends upon the jurisdiction granted it by the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942. This Act authorizes any person subject to any provision of a regulation, order, or price schedule to file with the Administrator a protest specifically setting forth objections to any such provision. Sec. 203(a). It then provides that any person aggrieved by the denial of such a protest may file a complaint with this Court, “specifying his objections and praying that the regulation, order, or price schedule protested be enjoined or set aside in whole or in part.” This Court is expressly limited to a consideration of objections to such regulation, order, or price schedule, which were set forth in the protest before the Administrator. Sec. 204(a). One purpose of the protest procedure is “to give the Administrator a chance to reconsider any challenged provisions * * * in the light of further evidence or arguments which may be advanced by the protestant.”7 Another purpose of the protest procedure is the development of a record on which this Court may review the validity of challenged regulations.8 Inherent in these purposes and statutory provisions is the necessity for a protestant to specify clearly and intelligibly the objections he desires to make.9 In considering a protest, the Administrator therefore is required to consider only those points which are set forth clearly; he is not obliged to search the record with care to find what objections may be present by way of innuendo, inference, or intimation. In this case complainants’ point with regard to the construction of the Housing Regulation was not raised in the protest proceedings with sufficient clarity to have required the Administrator’s consideration and ruling. The only reference we find in the record appears in a memorandum filed with an affidavit in support of the protest.10 In this memorandum the point is discussed as part of a general argument that the plan of the rent control program is to permit continuance of practices in effect on the maximum rent date. There is no indication that complainants were actually requesting an interpretation of the Housing Regulation by the Administrator. Consequently this Court must accept the Administrator’s interpretation of the Housing Regulation as not permitting a sliding scale of rents.

Because complainants make certain general contentions which might be said to bear upon the question of the adequacy of the Regulations, it seems appropriate to point out that nowhere in the proceedings has any attack been made upon the validity of the Regulations.

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Bluebook (online)
140 F.2d 974, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 4092, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowman-v-bowles-eca-1944.