Brewer v. Erwin

600 P.2d 398, 287 Or. 435, 6 A.L.R. 4th 503, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 1182
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1979
DocketTC A7604 04893; SC 25626; TC A7709 12910; SC 25626
StatusPublished
Cited by110 cases

This text of 600 P.2d 398 (Brewer v. Erwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brewer v. Erwin, 600 P.2d 398, 287 Or. 435, 6 A.L.R. 4th 503, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 1182 (Or. 1979).

Opinion

*437 LINDE, J.

The present appeal is one phase of a landlord-tenant dispute to which the parties have devoted an extraordinary amount of their time and efforts and those of several courts. 1 The major questions on this appeal involve the tenant’s claims for damages under the Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, ORS 91.700 to 91.895, and under tort law. Other issues concern certain rulings on evidence and on attorney fees and the denial of a preliminary injunction.

The initial course of events is undisputed. Plaintiff Suzan Brewer rented the upper of two apartments in a building, formerly a home, owned by defendant Mar-quam Investment Corporation. Defendants Warde Erwin and Lavelle Mullennex are Marquam’s owners and officers. Charles Erwin and Colin Lamb, the other individual defendants, are Warde Erwin’s law partners. The building was old and had been allowed to deteriorate. The dispute between the parties began when Marquam decided to demolish the building and sent plaintiff an eviction notice. Upon receiving the notice, plaintiff became interested in a group which sought to prevent the demolition of old houses in the neighborhood and attended one or two of the group’s meetings. She did not move out of her apartment. This led to a number of confrontations between the defendants on one side and plaintiff and other persons at the apartment on the other. Plaintiff eventually filed suit, originally asking injunctive relief against allegedly wrongful efforts by defendants to evict her by force, and subsequently adding claims for damages.

After a series of pretrial motions and rulings, the case finally was tried on two causes of action stated in *438 the ninth amended complaint. These sought general and punitive damages against all defendants except Charles Erwin, the first for intentional infliction of emotional distress, and the second for a battery by Warde Erwin while acting in the scope of his authority as president of Marquam Investment Corporation. The trial court granted involuntary nonsuits on both counts in favor of defendants Lamb and Mullennex and directed a verdict in favor of Warde Erwin and the corporation on the first count. On the battery count, the jury returned a verdict against Warde Erwin and Marquam in the amount of $650 general damages and no punitive damages.

Damages Under the Residential Landlord and Tenant Act.

The terms of the act. Under three of plaintiff’s assignments of error directed at the trial court’s rulings on plaintiff’s pleadings, the parties argue whether the Residential Landlord and Tenant Act provides for the recovery of damages for emotional distress and punitive damages for violations of the act. 2 We begin with an examination of the act.

Enacted in 1973, Oregon’s statute is patterned on, though not identical with, the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act. 7A Uniform Laws Annotated 499 (1978). Beginning with provisions of general applicability (ORS 91.700 - 91.735), it deals with the terms of rental agreements (ORS 91.740 - 91.755), imposes obligations on landlords and on tenants (ORS *439 91.760 - 91.790), and spells out tenants’ and landlords’ remedies (ORS 91.800 - 91.865). Several provisions deal expressly with the remedy of damages. While these provisions do not resolve all arguable issues, it is apparent that the drafters of the Residential Landlord and Tenant Act were as concerned with the remedial aspects of disputes between landlords and tenants as with the parties’ substantive obligations during the tenancy. Indeed, prescribing rules for the conduct and consequences of disputes in this often difficult relationship is a central purpose of the act.

Provisions for a tenant’s recovery of damages from the landlord are found both in the general and in the more specific sections. The general provision states that the remedies provided by the act "shall be so administered that an aggrieved party may recover appropriate damages.” ORS 91.725(1). What damages are "appropriate” is sometimes spelled out and sometimes left obscure.

Among the specific provisions, a tenant may recover "actual damages” plus up to three months’ rent if the landlord includes forbidden provisions in the rental agreement, ORS 91.745, and twice the amount of a security deposit or prepaid rent wrongfully withheld, ORS 91.760(8). If the landlord fails to comply with the rental agreement or with his statutory obligations to maintain the premises in a habitable condition, the tenant may "recover damages.” ORS 91.800(2). The next section, ORS 91.805, allows the tenant to recover "damages based upon the diminution in the fair rental value of the dwelling unit,” unless he or she prefers to procure substitute housing at the landlord’s cost, if the landlord, contrary to the rental agreement or the statute, deliberately or with gross negligence fails to supply "any essential service.” Next, if the landlord "unlawfully removes or excludes the tenant from the premises or wilfully diminishes services” by interrupting "essential services” such as heat, water, or electricity, the tenant may recover twice the periodic rent or twice the ''actual damages’’ *440 sustained, whichever is greater. ORS 91.815. The same measure of damages applies if the landlord retaliates against a tenant who complains to him or to the government or joins a tenants’ organization by raising the tenant’s rent, decreasing services, or threatening eviction. ORS 91.865. The landlord is also liable for any "loss” resulting from a "deliberate or negligent act” in storing personal property thought to have been abandoned by the tenant, or twice the "actual damages sustained by the tenant” if the landlord’s failure to deal properly with the tenant’s goods is "deliberate and malicious.” ORS 91.840.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
600 P.2d 398, 287 Or. 435, 6 A.L.R. 4th 503, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 1182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-erwin-or-1979.