Landes v. Barrett

199 F.2d 539, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 3388
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 28, 1952
Docket14603
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 199 F.2d 539 (Landes v. Barrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Landes v. Barrett, 199 F.2d 539, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 3388 (8th Cir. 1952).

Opinion

COLLET, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of tenants in an action brought on their own behalf against a landlord for overcharges in rent collected, for damages, and attorney fees, under the provisions of Sec. 205 of the Housing and Rent Act of 1947, 1 as amended, Title 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 1895. The controversy involves the following facts.

Mrs. Landes, the. owner and landlord of the premises involved, located in Kansas City, Missouri, first rented the property from the then owner in 1941 and operated it as rental property. She was then a single woman and occupied a portion of it for her own living quarters, renting the remainder. The property consists of a three-story building with several rooms on each floor. She purchased the property for $4,200.00 in 1943 and remodeled the second floor (which is the only portion of the building now involved) extensively. Prior to the remodeling, the premises involved had been rented as a girls’ dormitory, and it appears that its arrangement was such that the rooms on the second floor were best adapted to occupancy independently of each other and were so rented. When the remodeling was done it was planned that, whether designedly so or not, the rooms were so connected by doors and so arranged that they could be thrown together into two groups or apartments, or each room could be used separately. There were two baths, two kitchenettes, four large rooms, suitable by juxtaposition and interior design for either living rooms or bedrooms. The baths were so located that one could be used with one pair of the large rooms, the other with the remaining two large rooms. Or one bath could be made to serve the occupants of three of the large rooms and the other used as a private bath for the fourth. This somewhat ingenious arrangement seems to have been largely responsible for the differences which later arose between Mrs. Landes and the Local Rent Office, finally resulting in charges of confusion hurled at each by the other and a charge in appellant’s brief that the tactics of the local Rent Office compare unfavorably-to any of the acts coming to her knowledge (dehors the record) from behind the Iron Curtain. We observe in passing that the trial court did not agree that the comparison was fair to the Rent Office, and neither do we. Reference is made to it only to indicate the extent to which appellant urges her charge, which we shall consider later, that subsequent actions of the Rent Office were arbitrary and capricious.

*542 After the remodeling was done, appellant registered the remodeled premises in May, 1944, with the Area Rent Office at Kansas City, Missouri, as rooms in a dwelling used as a dormitory for girls. In the fall of 1946 Miss Johnson and Miss Brader rented one group of these rooms, consisting of two large rooms, bath and kitchenette, as an apartment 2 and used it together until in October, 1946, Miss Millsap moved in with them and thereafter the three occupied the apartment at the same rental theretofore charged Misses Johnson and Brader, until June 30, 1947, when Miss Brader moved out. Miss Johnson and Miss Mill-sap continued to occupy it at the same rate until they moved out in March, 1949. The rent specified by Mrs. Landes in the May, 1944, registration was for the two large rooms separately at a rate of $7.50 each for single occupancy and $9.00 each for double occupancy. The rent charged was $18.00, or the double occupancy rate for each.

In November, 1948, appellant caused the following advertisement to be inserted in the “Want Ad” columns of The Kansas City Star:

“To Rent — Apartments, furnished, Armour-Gillham — lovely 4 rooms, suitable 2-3 adults, no couples. Armour bus. VA. 6383.”

Mr. L. M. Barrett and Mr. Byron Jackson answered the advertisement and rented the other group of rooms on the second floor, consisting of two large rooms, bath, kitchen and porch, as an apartment, and occupied it together, as such. The rent specifiéd for that space by Mrs. Landes in the May, 1944, registration was for the two large rooms separately, fixed at $14.00 per week for double occupancy for the large room with private bath and porch (no single occupancy rate was specified therefor), $9.00 per week for double occupancy for the other large room, and $7.50 per week for single occupancy of the latter. The rent charged for the use of both rooms, together with the bath and kitchenette, was $23.00 per week, 3 or the double occupancy rate for both.

Mrs. Landes testified she had a discussion with a representative of the Area Rent Office in February, 1946, about whether it was permissible to rent more than one unit (room) to one or more persons (as apartments) at the rate specified in the May, 1944, registration for the rooms separately, and was assured that such practice was proper and that the Rent Office was interested in the rate and not particularly in the individuals who might use the space. She further testified that in 1946 the propriety of her May, 1944, registration was raised by the Area Rent Office, an investigation was made, and no fault was found with it. There was no contradictory testimony on either subject.

In December, 1948, Mrs. Landes purchased another piece of property in Kansas City. Early in 1949 the Rent Control Office raised some question about the manner in which it was being rented. Mrs. Landes talked to a deputy in the Rent Office about that matter. The property now involved was brought into the conversation. They did not get along well, and she hired an attorney who had previously been an attorney in the Area Rent Control Office. He testified in this case that the matter about which the Rent Office had raised a question was satisfactorily adjusted, but that the subject of the present controversy rapidly developed into an impasse, the Rent Office requesting information concerning it which he was unable to furnish. He further testified that the deputy in the Rent Office asserted that the registration of May, 1944, and the manner of renting the premises were very confusing, charged Mrs. Landes with responsibility for the confusion, and exhibited 'antagonism toward her. Mrs. Landes in turn charges the Rent Office with responsibility for any confusion that existed. There seems to be little doubt that confusion existed. The record is somewhat imperfect and we are required to draw, -inferences in some instances from reported *543 facts in order to piece out the true situation. The confusion appears to have resulted from the fact that the premises were registered as separate units of one room each and rented as two apartments. The regulations required that apartments be registered as such. As heretofore stated, the premises could be used either as separate rooms or as two apartments. Several investigations and inspections' were made. The Rent Office insisted that the premises be registered as apartments. Several conferences were held between the attorney and representatives of the Rent Office, culminating in Mrs. Landes’ refusal to register the premises as 'apartments. She has never so registered them. Thereafter, on April 4, 1950, the Office of the Housing Expediter, through the local Rent Control Office, issued orders which are the principal subject of attack in the present controversy. They are as follows:

“United States of America

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199 F.2d 539, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 3388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landes-v-barrett-ca8-1952.