Heyert v. Taddese

70 A.3d 680, 431 N.J. Super. 388
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 25, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 70 A.3d 680 (Heyert v. Taddese) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heyert v. Taddese, 70 A.3d 680, 431 N.J. Super. 388 (N.J. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

PARRILLO, P.J.A.D.

This appeal arises from a landlord-tenant dispute. The tenants, plaintiffs Brian Heyert, Jude Noel, Diana Weiner, Peter Schoepe, Jr., and Karl Mawhinney (collectively tenants), claimed that the landlords, defendants Menassie Taddese and Yayine Melaku, violated the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act (CFA), N.J.S.A. 56:8-1 to -195, by charging rent in excess of that allowed by local rent control ordinances, and that the municipality erred in granting the landlords a hardship rent increase. The landlords claimed that the municipality’s rent control ordinance is unconstitutional and that the legal base rent calculated under the ordinance was arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable.

At a hearing on the parties’ respective actions in lieu of prerogative writs, the court vacated the hardship rent increase and dismissed the landlords’ challenge to the legal base rent calculations. Later, in ruling on motions for summary judgment, reconsideration, clarification, and attorney fees, the court dismissed the landlords’ constitutional claims against the municipality, and found in favor of the tenants on their CFA claim. The court entered final judgment in favor of the tenants for treble the amount of excess rent of $59,466, and for attorney fees and costs.

On appeal, the landlords argue that the court erred in finding the CFA to be applicable to this dispute. Further, they contend that even if the CFA were applicable, the court erred in finding that there were no genuine issues of material fact as to their violation of it. The landlords also assert error in the court’s dismissal of their constitutional claims, its refusal to entertain their challenge to the legal base rent calculation, and its reversal of the hardship rent increase. Finally, they claim that the attorney fees awarded by the court were excessive.

[405]*405By way of background, the Caparra homes project was built in Hoboken in 1985 as part of a federally-subsidized and city-managed program to provide home ownership opportunities to persons with moderate incomes and rental opportunities to those with low incomes. Buyers of the project’s two-family homes received a down payment of $15,000 in exchange for a twenty-year commitment to rent the home’s upper unit to a Section 81 eligible family pursuant to a Housing Assistance Payments (HAP) contract. The HAP contracts began to expire in 2005, at which time the rental units became subject to the City’s Municipal Rent Control Ordinance.2

Landlords Melaku and Taddese (collectively landlords) are husband and wife. They purchased their first Caparra home, located at 90 Grand Street, in May 2005. After the HAP contract on that property expired in June 2005, the landlords notified their upstairs tenant that they would be raising his rent by twenty-eight percent. The tenant complained to the Division Chief of the Hoboken Rent Leveling & Stabilization Board (Board), who notified the landlords that they were only entitled to increase the rent by 3.4% in accordance with the City’s rent control ordinance. According to [406]*406Melaku, this incident made her and Taddese “keenly aware of rent control.”

On October 16, 2006, the landlords purchased a second Caparra home, located at 81 Adams Street, for $955,000. During the winter and spring of 2007, the property was extensively renovated and improved.

On June 27, 2007, the landlords entered into a one-year lease with Heyert, Noel and Weiner, effective July 1, 2007, for “the apartment located at 81 Adams Street, Unit 2 and Parking Spot # 3 referred to hereafter as ‘the Apartment.’ ” The total monthly rent for the apartment was set at $4000 and the tenants were required to pay a $6000 security deposit.

On July 20, 2007, the landlords converted the two units at 81 Adams Street into condominiums. The landlords did not inform the tenants of the condominium conversion nor did they register Unit 2 with the rent leveling office. In August 2007, the landlords sold Unit 1 and used the proceeds of the sale to pay off their mortgage on the entire 81 Adams Street property. In April 2008, however, the landlords took out a new mortgage on Unit 2, in the amount of $417,000.

During the summer of 2008, Weiner’s tenancy ceased, and that of Schoepe and Mawhinney began. In July 2008, the landlords raised the rent for Unit 2 to $4100 per month; in July 2009, they decreased the rent to $3900 per month.

On August 18, 2009, the tenants filed a request for a legal rent calculation with the Division of Rent Leveling and Stabilization. On September 21, 2009, the Board’s Division Chief notified the landlords that the legal base rent for the apartment was $2086 per month and that “if a tenant has been overcharged in rent, such excess rent shall be refunded or credited to the tenant by the landlord forthwith.” The landlords were also notified that they had twenty days to appeal the legal base rent determination.

The landlords filed their rent appeal on November 12, 2009, well outside of the twenty-day limitation period. The appeal was [407]*407considered by the Board at its meeting on December 9, 2009, and denied by a unanimous vote.

On December 11, 2009, the landlords amended their 2009 rent control registration statement for the apartment to indicate for the first time that $400 of the $3900 rent was for a parking surcharge. The tenants deny that they ever paid $400 for parking, claiming that parking was included for free in the monthly rent, and citing two email messages from Melaku in May 2007 in which she first offered to give the tenants parking for $125 per month for a total rent of $4125, and later said that she would not charge for parking and the total rent would be $4000.

On December 22, 2009, the landlords filed an application for a hardship rent increase that was heard at the Board meeting on January 13, 2010. On January 27, 2010, the Board issued a resolution approving a hardship increase of $1962, allowing a total rent of $4048. The Board denied the landlords’ request that the increase be made retroactive, however, and ruled that “all increases would be prospective.” On January 29, 2010, the Division Chief notified the landlords that the hardship application had been granted and that they must serve the tenants with thirty-days notice’ of the rental increase.

On February 4, 2010, the tenants agreed to settle with the landlords for a reduced sum. In exchange for notarized releases of their claims, the tenants received checks from the landlords for amounts varying between $6000 and $12,000. When deposited, however, the checks were returned for insufficient funds.

On February 11, 2010, Taddese sent an email message to the tenants asserting that the settlement agreement was not binding. On February 17, 2010, he sent a message stating that the proper base rent combined with the tax surcharge might well amount to more than the rent that was charged and warning that the tenants must “come to some agreement based on these new realities.”3

[408]*408Thereafter, both parties filed actions in lieu of prerogative writs in the Law Division. On March 3, 2010, the tenants filed a complaint against the landlords and the Board, asserting claims against the landlords for overcharging rent, violating the CFA, and violating the Rent Security Deposit Act (RSDA), N.J.S.A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 A.3d 680, 431 N.J. Super. 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heyert-v-taddese-njsuperctappdiv-2013.