Hotel Enterprises v. Porter

157 F.2d 690, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2781
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 12, 1946
DocketNo. 302
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 157 F.2d 690 (Hotel Enterprises v. Porter) 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
Hotel Enterprises v. Porter, 157 F.2d 690, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2781 (eca 1946).

Opinion

McAllister, judge.

Complainant partnership operates the Cherokee Hotel in the capital city of Florida at Tallahassee. For at least 20 years in the past, prior to national price and rent control, the hotel has charged a special rate for certain rooms, during the biennial sessions of the state legislature. This special rate consisted of a flat charge for a room, regardless of how many persons used or occupied it. Thus, the hotel permitted one person to register for a room, although several persons might use, occupy, and sleep in it; and the person who registered could, in effect, sublet it to another individual or to a group. No additional charge was made by the hotel for the occupancy of the room by several persons, under the single reservation, or for the numerous additional special services furnished to such guests.

The explanation for this rather unusual situation is that during the sixty day legislative session, held every two years, there is an especially great influx to Tallahassee of legislators, lobbyists, political leaders, and other interested persons, and that the rental practices in question had been found satisfactory as well as required by the public. Accordingly, it had become the established custom among the hotels of the city over a period of many years.

For the purposes of this case, it can be said that the rent on the date determining [692]*692the maximum rent for the rooms in the Cherokee Hotel was substantially lower than that prevailing at the previous sessions of the Florida legislature since 1923.

On April 13, 1943, the operator of the Cherokee Hotel filed an application with the Area Rent Director for the adjustment of rentals for 43 listed rooms, setting forth that the rooms were being rented in the manner and at the same price which had been observed for all the legislative sessions since 1923 up to and including 1941. It was further submitted that all of the rooms which were rented to groups were for use as lodgings, offices, and conference rooms; that any person renting a room could have any number of guests use it overnight without extra charge; that the overnight occupancy of each room was approximately three persons, while occasionally five or six, or even more, might occupy it; that such method of rental necessitated a substantial increase in the services, furniture, and furnishings over that normally required; that the arrangement was designed to make a limited number of rooms serve a maximum number of guests; that great inconvenience would be caused to the hotel and to the guests if the long prevailing practice were prohibited; and that the already serious shortage of accommodations would be aggravated if the rental practices of the past were set aside. Moreover, the complainant set forth that it was not seeking to increase or in anywise change its method of rental because of the war or for any other reason, but that it was only asking to be permitted to operate its hotel in exactly the same manner and at the same rates which had prevailed for many years. Finally, it was submitted that approval of the established rental plan would cost the occupants of the rooms less than would be the case if each occupant were required to pay the rent fixed by the Rent Administrator, and that the hotel, at the same time, could accommodate more guests than with the usual and conventional operation.

On consideration of the foregoing petition, and after a careful investigation, the Area Rent Director, on May 7, 1943, entered an order in which he recited that he had found that the rent, on the date determining the Maximum Rent for the hotel accommodations in question, was.substantially lower than at the previous sessions of the Florida legislature — with regard to the rooms in question — “by reason of seasonal demand or legislative session, and he deems it advisable to provide for different maximum rents for the session of the Florida Legislature during the months of April and May 1943. Therefore, on the basis of the rents which the Rent Director finds were generally prevailing in the Defense-Rental Area for comparable housing accommodations during the year ending March 1, 1942,” he ordered that the maximum rents for the rooms in question be established during the period of April and May, 1943, as requested by complainant, at the rate charged during the legislative sessions for the prior twenty years.

All of this was entirely satisfactory to complainant; no complaint was thereafter filed on the order; and the Administrator never sought to review the determination. Nothing more was heard of the matter until 1945, when the operator of the hotel again filed a petition, seeking the identical relief asked and granted in 1943.

However, on the filing of the second pe- • tition, the same Area Rent Director who . had granted the petition in 1943, denied the petition in 1945, for the reason that the facts stated in the petition “do not entitle you to the relief requested under Section 5(a)(7) of the Rent Regulation.” This section provides . that in the circumstances enumerated therein, the Administrator may issue an order changing the maximum rents otherwise allowable or the minimum services required. One of such circumstances is where the rent during the thirty day period determining the maximum rent for a room was substantially lower than at other times of the year by reason of seasonal demand for such room. In such cases the Administrator’s order may, if he deems it advisable, provide for different maximum rents for different periods of the calendar year.

The Board of Review to whom the protest was referred for the hearing of oral arguments sustained the decision of the Area Rent Director, holding that the term, “seasonal demand” as used in the Regula[693]*693tion, contemplated adjustment only in those cases where there was variation in rent at •different times during the same year — or “an annual cycle of rent variation;” and •that when the variations occurred biennially, they were not “seasonal” within the meaning of the regulation. The Board also held that the requested retroactive relief could only be had upon a showing of special •circumstances, and that certain evidence relied upon by the complainant, in this regard, did not constitute such special circumstances as would support the granting •of the retroactive adjustment — citing as authority for its decision, In the matter of Kuskin & Rotberg, Inc. v. Porter, Em.App., 153 F.2d 1016.

The Board’s recommendations were approved in the Administrator’s opinion accompanying the order denying the protest, in which he declared that a biennial seasonal demand did not relate to the seasons of the year, and, therefore, was not a “seasonal demand” within the meaning of the Regulation, “even though it occurs at regular fixed periods.” Moreover, it was said that the petition could in, no event be granted since the rentings upon which the petition was founded all occurred prior to the filing of the petition for adjustment.

On the question whether the period of April and May, during the biennial sessions of the state legislature wás a seasonal period, and whether the demand for rooms at the hotel during that time constituted a seasonal demand, we are of the opinion that such a demand during the legislative sessions was clearly a seasonal demand. It was a demand that for at least twenty years had been regular, periodic, and recurrent biennially during‘the same months of the year.

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Bluebook (online)
157 F.2d 690, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hotel-enterprises-v-porter-eca-1946.