FERREN, Associate Judge:
The District of Columbia, as landlord for subsidized public housing, brought an action against one of its tenants, appellee Latisha Reid, for possession of her dwelling unit at 2220 Bryan Place, S.E. The basis for this action was nonpayment of rent under the lease for the Bryan Place unit, coupled with rent arrearages under an earlier lease for public housing at 755 Yuma Street, S.E. where Reid previously resided. The Housing Management Administration (HMA) had transferred Reid’s residence to Bryan Place in order to permit renovation of the Yuma Street unit. Because the Bryan Place lease did not have a “special supplement” that expressly carried over the balance due under the Yuma Street lease, see 14 DCMR § 6205.14 (1991), the trial court granted partial summary judgment for Reid on the pos-sessory action based on rent due under the Yuma Street lease. On appeal, the District contends that Thornton v. District of Columbia, 647 A.2d 385 (D.C.1994) — a case decided after the trial court ruled here — requires reversal. We held in Thornton that the District was entitled to possession of a public housing unit based on nonpayment of rent for another unit from which the tenant had transferred. See id. at 387-88. Because the dispositive facts in Thornton are identical to the salient facts here, and because Thornton binds this division of the court, see M.A.P. v. Ryan, 285 A.2d 310 (D.C.1971), we must conclude the trial court erred in granting partial summary judgment for the tenant. We therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I.
On October 16, 1989, Reid entered into a standard-form lease agreement with the District’s Housing Management Administration, a branch of the Department of Public and Assisted Housing, for the Yuma Street unit, which Reid’s mother had been renting since [1372]*13721977. Reid’s lease included an addendum in which she agreed to assume responsibility for $8,768.04 in rent arrearages which had accrued dining the period of her mother’s Yuma Street tenancy.
Soon thereafter, the HMA asked Reid to vacate Yuma Street because of the need for substantial repairs. The District’s “Notice of Lease Termination” indicated that an arrear-age of $8,681.50 remained under the Yuma Street lease and further noted that Reid would be transferred to Bryan Place. On October 22, 1989, Reid vacated the Yuma Street premises and, the next day, signed a standard-form lease for the Bryan Place unit. The lease was the same as the one used for Yuma Street except that, unlike the Yuma Street lease, the lease for Bryan Place did not have an addendum that expressly reflected the outstanding rent due on the earlier lease.
More than two years later, on January 29, 1992, the HMA served Reid with a “Notice to Vacate” her Bryan Place residence for nonpayment of rent. Thereafter, on March 23, 1992, the District filed an action for possession alleging that Reid owed the District $10,209.86 for the period from December 1, 1984 to March 31, 1992.1 Reid moved for summary judgment on July 24, 1992, contending that the parties had “inten[ded] to surrender and terminate the earlier [Yuma Street] lease” upon signing the Bryan Place lease, and that a possessory action based on rent arrearages under the Yuma Street lease was accordingly barred. To support its action for possession based on Reid’s liability for arrearages under the first lease, the District, in opposing summary judgment, relied on three authorities: (1) paragraph 6(e) of the standard-form lease; (2) three municipal regulations, 14 DCMR §§ 6205.8(b), 6205.13, and 6205.14 (1991); and (3) this court’s decision in District of Columbia v. Suydam, 591 A.2d 856 (D.C.1991), where we held that a public housing tenant’s execution of a new lease for her apartment, in order to reflect a change in head of household, did not preclude an action for possession based on nonpayment of rent under her previous lease for the same apartment.
The trial court granted partial summary judgment for Reid on August 17,1992, agreeing with Reid that the District could not bring a possessory action based on the Yuma Street lease because, in the court’s view, the Bryan Place tenancy was not an extension of the Yuma Street tenancy. Instead, according to the trial court, Bryan Place was an altogether new tenancy created upon surrender of the Yuma Street lease. The court, however, noted that its ruling did not preclude a civil action for damages (or debt due) for the delinquent rent.2
[1373]*1373II.
We review the trial court’s ruling in light of Thornton, a possessory action against public housing tenants based partly on nonpayment of rent under leases for dwelling units where the tenants had lived before transferring to their present units, in order to permit renovation of their former units. In Thornton, the tenants defended on the ground that execution of leases for their new apartments terminated the leases for their previous apartments and thus prevented an action for possession based upon failure to pay rent under the earlier lease. We rejected this argument by applying Suydam, where we declined to apply to public housing the common law rule that a new lease for particular premises operates as a surrender of an older one. See, e.g., Schwartz v. Brown, 64 A.2d 298, 299 (D.C.1949). We had noted in Suy-dam, in particular, that when municipal regulations require a new lease to reflect a change in head of household, see 14 DCMR § 6205.8(a) (1991) (new lease required whenever head of household altered by marriage, death, separation, reconciliation, or other change), it “would make no sense to hold that [the tenant] and the District intended a surrender or extinction of the existing tenancy when they signed the [new] lease.” Suydam, 591 A.2d at 859.
In Thornton, we saw no legal basis for saying that a transfer from one unit to another, when required by municipal regulation, see 14 DCMR § 6205.8(b) (1991), presents a situation any different from the one in Suy-dam, where the tenant executed a new lease for the same apartment. In either case, the new lease extends an existing tenancy rather than terminating it. See Thornton, 647 A.2d at 388. We regarded as immaterial the fact that two separate housing units were involved in Thornton whereas only one was involved in Suydam; we focused instead upon the language in the standard-form lease and in the applicable municipal regulations, as we had in Suydam. See Thornton, 647 A.2d at 388; Suydam, 591 A.2d at 859-60. We relied in Thornton, as in Suydam, on language in paragraph 6(e) of the second, standard-form lease:
If this lease is an extension of occupancy by the Tenant under prior lease or leases with the [Housing Management] Administration, any such amount due under the prior lease or leases may be charged and collected as if the same had occurred hereunder.[3]
Thornton, 647 A.2d at 386. We also cited language from two municipal regulations: 14 DCMR §§ 6205.13 and 6205.14. See Thornton, 647 A.2d at 386, 388.
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FERREN, Associate Judge:
The District of Columbia, as landlord for subsidized public housing, brought an action against one of its tenants, appellee Latisha Reid, for possession of her dwelling unit at 2220 Bryan Place, S.E. The basis for this action was nonpayment of rent under the lease for the Bryan Place unit, coupled with rent arrearages under an earlier lease for public housing at 755 Yuma Street, S.E. where Reid previously resided. The Housing Management Administration (HMA) had transferred Reid’s residence to Bryan Place in order to permit renovation of the Yuma Street unit. Because the Bryan Place lease did not have a “special supplement” that expressly carried over the balance due under the Yuma Street lease, see 14 DCMR § 6205.14 (1991), the trial court granted partial summary judgment for Reid on the pos-sessory action based on rent due under the Yuma Street lease. On appeal, the District contends that Thornton v. District of Columbia, 647 A.2d 385 (D.C.1994) — a case decided after the trial court ruled here — requires reversal. We held in Thornton that the District was entitled to possession of a public housing unit based on nonpayment of rent for another unit from which the tenant had transferred. See id. at 387-88. Because the dispositive facts in Thornton are identical to the salient facts here, and because Thornton binds this division of the court, see M.A.P. v. Ryan, 285 A.2d 310 (D.C.1971), we must conclude the trial court erred in granting partial summary judgment for the tenant. We therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I.
On October 16, 1989, Reid entered into a standard-form lease agreement with the District’s Housing Management Administration, a branch of the Department of Public and Assisted Housing, for the Yuma Street unit, which Reid’s mother had been renting since [1372]*13721977. Reid’s lease included an addendum in which she agreed to assume responsibility for $8,768.04 in rent arrearages which had accrued dining the period of her mother’s Yuma Street tenancy.
Soon thereafter, the HMA asked Reid to vacate Yuma Street because of the need for substantial repairs. The District’s “Notice of Lease Termination” indicated that an arrear-age of $8,681.50 remained under the Yuma Street lease and further noted that Reid would be transferred to Bryan Place. On October 22, 1989, Reid vacated the Yuma Street premises and, the next day, signed a standard-form lease for the Bryan Place unit. The lease was the same as the one used for Yuma Street except that, unlike the Yuma Street lease, the lease for Bryan Place did not have an addendum that expressly reflected the outstanding rent due on the earlier lease.
More than two years later, on January 29, 1992, the HMA served Reid with a “Notice to Vacate” her Bryan Place residence for nonpayment of rent. Thereafter, on March 23, 1992, the District filed an action for possession alleging that Reid owed the District $10,209.86 for the period from December 1, 1984 to March 31, 1992.1 Reid moved for summary judgment on July 24, 1992, contending that the parties had “inten[ded] to surrender and terminate the earlier [Yuma Street] lease” upon signing the Bryan Place lease, and that a possessory action based on rent arrearages under the Yuma Street lease was accordingly barred. To support its action for possession based on Reid’s liability for arrearages under the first lease, the District, in opposing summary judgment, relied on three authorities: (1) paragraph 6(e) of the standard-form lease; (2) three municipal regulations, 14 DCMR §§ 6205.8(b), 6205.13, and 6205.14 (1991); and (3) this court’s decision in District of Columbia v. Suydam, 591 A.2d 856 (D.C.1991), where we held that a public housing tenant’s execution of a new lease for her apartment, in order to reflect a change in head of household, did not preclude an action for possession based on nonpayment of rent under her previous lease for the same apartment.
The trial court granted partial summary judgment for Reid on August 17,1992, agreeing with Reid that the District could not bring a possessory action based on the Yuma Street lease because, in the court’s view, the Bryan Place tenancy was not an extension of the Yuma Street tenancy. Instead, according to the trial court, Bryan Place was an altogether new tenancy created upon surrender of the Yuma Street lease. The court, however, noted that its ruling did not preclude a civil action for damages (or debt due) for the delinquent rent.2
[1373]*1373II.
We review the trial court’s ruling in light of Thornton, a possessory action against public housing tenants based partly on nonpayment of rent under leases for dwelling units where the tenants had lived before transferring to their present units, in order to permit renovation of their former units. In Thornton, the tenants defended on the ground that execution of leases for their new apartments terminated the leases for their previous apartments and thus prevented an action for possession based upon failure to pay rent under the earlier lease. We rejected this argument by applying Suydam, where we declined to apply to public housing the common law rule that a new lease for particular premises operates as a surrender of an older one. See, e.g., Schwartz v. Brown, 64 A.2d 298, 299 (D.C.1949). We had noted in Suy-dam, in particular, that when municipal regulations require a new lease to reflect a change in head of household, see 14 DCMR § 6205.8(a) (1991) (new lease required whenever head of household altered by marriage, death, separation, reconciliation, or other change), it “would make no sense to hold that [the tenant] and the District intended a surrender or extinction of the existing tenancy when they signed the [new] lease.” Suydam, 591 A.2d at 859.
In Thornton, we saw no legal basis for saying that a transfer from one unit to another, when required by municipal regulation, see 14 DCMR § 6205.8(b) (1991), presents a situation any different from the one in Suy-dam, where the tenant executed a new lease for the same apartment. In either case, the new lease extends an existing tenancy rather than terminating it. See Thornton, 647 A.2d at 388. We regarded as immaterial the fact that two separate housing units were involved in Thornton whereas only one was involved in Suydam; we focused instead upon the language in the standard-form lease and in the applicable municipal regulations, as we had in Suydam. See Thornton, 647 A.2d at 388; Suydam, 591 A.2d at 859-60. We relied in Thornton, as in Suydam, on language in paragraph 6(e) of the second, standard-form lease:
If this lease is an extension of occupancy by the Tenant under prior lease or leases with the [Housing Management] Administration, any such amount due under the prior lease or leases may be charged and collected as if the same had occurred hereunder.[3]
Thornton, 647 A.2d at 386. We also cited language from two municipal regulations: 14 DCMR §§ 6205.13 and 6205.14. See Thornton, 647 A.2d at 386, 388. The first regulation, § 6205.13, provides:
Tenants who execute a new dwelling lease as a result of transfer from one (1) unit to another, or as a result of any other requirement for a new lease, shall remain liable for any delinquent rent or other charges relating to the prior lease.
According to § 6205.14, under the second regulation:
The HMA may unilaterally execute a special supplement to the new lease which assesses the amount due under the old lease against the new lease.
[1374]*1374In permitting a possessory action based on rent arrears under the original lease, Thornton compels reversal here for three reasons: (1) The District, as in Thornton, executed a new lease with Reid for Bryan Place pursuant to municipal regulation § 6205.8(b) after the transfer from Yuma Street; (2) The Bryan Place lease has the same standard-form lease used in Thornton, containing paragraph 6(e), and thus preserves the District’s right to possession for unpaid rent in the previous, Yuma Street lease; and (3) the same municipal regulations apply.
Reid contends, however, that the District’s failure to comply with regulation § 6205.14 created a material difference that distinguishes this case from Thornton. Specifically, the District failed to attach a “special supplement,” or addendum, that “assesses the amount due under the old [Yuma Street] lease against the new [Bryan Place] lease” pursuant to § 6205.14. Reid argues that § 6205.14 implies arrearages can be carried over from a previous public housing lease only if the HMA attaches a “special supplement” to the new lease. Reid therefore urges us to conclude that the omission of a separate supplement therefore evidences a mutual intent to surrender the Yuma Street lease (and all claims arising out of that lease), rather than to extend the tenancy subject to § 6205.13.
Although the significance that Reid attributes to the absence of a “special supplement” is not implausible, we are bound by Thornton to reject it.4 Reid overstates the importance of municipal regulation § 6205.14. The Thornton court essentially premised its opinion on paragraph 6(e) of the standard-form lease and on § 6205.13 of the municipal regulations. As we stated in Thornton, referring to Suydam:
We found confirmation ... of the District’s right to seek dispossession for failure to pay rent under the former lease, both in the lease provision itself which made the arrearage a present obligation “as if the same had occurred [under the new lease],” and in 14 DCMR § 6205.13, which preserves the liability for delinquent rent of tenants who execute a new dwelling lease. Id. at 859-60; see also 14 DCMR § 6205.14 (District’s execution of a “special supplement to the new lease ... assesses the amount due under the old lease against the new lease.”)
Thornton, 647 A.2d at 387-88 (footnote omitted). Although this paragraph includes a “see also” citation to § 6205.14, and Part III of Thornton discusses the District’s authority to attach the “special supplement” identified in § 6205.14, that citation and discussion serve only to reinforce the court’s conclusion in Part II — premised entirely on paragraph 6(e) of the standard-form lease, on municipal regulation § 6205.13, and on Suydam—that, upon the tenant’s transfer to a new unit, rent due on the previous unit carries over. We cannot read Thornton in a way that leaves room for Reid’s argument that § 6205.14 plays a critical legal role.
We conclude, accordingly, that § 6205.13 mandates a carryover rental obligation when there is a required transfer from one public housing unit to another, and that § 6205.14 must be construed to permit — but not require — the District to supply an addendum spelling out the rent arrearages carried over. This conclusion is based on the plain language of § 6205.14: “The HMA may unilaterally” — not mutually — “execute a separate supplement....” The better practice, of course, is to provide the supplement, as was done in Thornton, so that the tenant will know exactly what obligation the District has in mind. But the supplement is not essential to a tenant’s obligation under the lease and § 6205.13.5
This case illustrates why omission of a § 6205.14 supplement will not necessarily [1375]*1375cause prejudice. The parties here were aware of Reid’s outstanding arrearages under the Yuma Street lease on October 16, 1989, the date the Yuma Street lease was executed, because of the addendum attached to the Yuma Street lease. Reid was transferred to Bryan Place only a week later, on October 23. Without doubt, therefore, Reid was aware of the information that a “special supplement” to the new lease, containing essentially the same information, would have provided at the time that lease was executed.
Finally, we are not persuaded by any of Reid’s other proffered reasons for surrender/termination of the Yuma Street lease upon her transfer to Bryan Place. The fact that the standard-form lease permitted the District literally to “terminate” Reid’s Yuma Street lease because of needed repairs, or that the District sent a “Notice of Lease Termination” upon Reid’s transfer from Yuma Street to Bryan Place, is not significant for purposes of our analysis. To repeat: the Thornton court made clear that termination of a lease, as such, does not necessarily terminate a public housing tenancy. See Thornton, 647 A.2d at 387-88. Thornton, accordingly, established that a rental arrangement for public housing is not limited to a particular housing unit but encompasses any such unit to which the tenant is lawfully transferred, even though the transfer requires a new lease. As a consequence, the original tenancy is extended by transfer, albeit through a new lease, with the result that rent arrearages attributable to the first dwelling unit carry over to the second as a matter of law.
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For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the trial court’s ruling (made before Thornton was decided) and reinstate the District’s pos-sessory action based upon rent arrearages under the lease for the Yuma Street property-
So ordered.