McMillian v. Anderson

57 So. 3d 422, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 57, 2011 WL 228456
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 2011
Docket45,929-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 So. 3d 422 (McMillian v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMillian v. Anderson, 57 So. 3d 422, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 57, 2011 WL 228456 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

GASKINS, J.'

|2The plaintiff/tenant appeals from a city court judgment which found that she owed her former landlord $1,052 in rent and utilities, subject to a $500 credit for her deposit, or a total of $552. We affirm in part and amend in part.

FACTS

The plaintiff, Vanessa McMillian 1 (hereinafter “tenant”), and the defendant, Barbara Anderson (hereinafter “landlord”), entered into a lease agreement on January 14, 2009. By the terms of the agreement, *424 the tenant rented a house owned by the landlord and located on Standifer Avenué in Monroe. The tenant agreed to pay a $500 security .deposit, and monthly rent of $500. The term of the lease was one year, and it began on January 15, 2009. In paragraph nine, the tenant stipulated that she had examined the premises and that they were in good order and repair and in a “safe, clean and tenantable condition.” According to paragraph 18, the tenant was responsible for securing and paying for all utility services on the premises. ^Additionally, paragraph 20 of the lease provided that major maintenance and repair not due to the tenant’s conduct were the responsibility of the landlord; otherwise, the tenant was obliged to keep and maintain the premises in good and sanitary condition and repair at her sole expense. The tenant moved into the three-bedroom, two-bathroom house on January 22, 2009.

Because the tenant was eligible for Section 8 assistance, the Monroe Housing Authority (MHA) inspected the house to see if it met Section 8 standards. On January 26, 2009, the house failed inspection. On February 2, 2009, the house was reinspected and passed. 2 Once the house passed inspection, the MHA paid $380 of the $500 monthly rent while the tenant paid $120. However, it would not pay for the period when the tenant occupied the residence prior to the house passing inspection. The landlord prorated the rent and utilities for the seven-day period when the tenant lived in the house between inspections; however, the tenant only paid $10 toward the utilities.

On November 5, 2009, another inspection of the house was conducted. A letter was sent to the landlord on that date advising that the property no longer met the housing authority standards and that repairs should be made within 30 days for the house “to remain active under the terms and conditions of the Housing Assistance Payments contract.” Among the failed |4items were a closet needing a clothes rod, commodes needing caps over anchor bolts, electricity being off in two bedrooms and a bathroom, and the Vent-a-Hood not working.

At some point, the tenant received a notice of rent change from the MHA. The letter stated that following annual review of the family’s income, the tenant’s portion of the rent would be reduced to $87, effective February 1, 2010; the MHA’s portion would be $433, for a total of $520 in rent. The letter referred to a housing assistance payments contract between the owner of the house and the Public Housing Authority which was dated February 2, 2009, and entered into on behalf of the tenant. No copy of any such contract is found in the appellate record.

Toward the end of the lease term, the landlord offered to let the tenant sign a new lease; however, the monthly rent under the new agreement would be $550. The tenant did not sign the lease. She attempted to pay $87 to the landlord by money order on February 2, 2010. The landlord refused to accept the payment from the tenant and initiated eviction proceedings. The tenant moved out and returned the keys to the landlord on March 1, 2010. On that same day, the tenant filed the instant suit in city court against the landlord for failure to return her $500 deposit.

*425 1 ,VThe landlord answered on March 12, 2010. She asserted that the tenant moved into the rental house on January 22, 2009, and that she still owed prorated rent ($112) and utilities ($94) for January 2009. Also, she alleged that in January 2010, instead of receiving the $500 monthly rent, she was only paid $125. Additionally, she contended that the rent of $550 owed for February 2010 was not paid, and that damage to the drywall in the house amounted to $100.

The matter was tried in city court on May 4, 2010. Neither party was represented by counsel. According to the tenant, she lived in the house until the end of February 2010; although she attempted to pay rent for that month, she testified that the landlord refused to accept it. She also stated that the house “constantly” failed inspection by the MHA and that Section 8 did not pay the rent when the house was not up to the city code. She testified that there was a variety of problems with the house, including the heating system. She asserted that the landlord did not bring her the new lease until February 2010.

The landlord testified that the house failed the initial inspection but passed a second inspection two weeks later. Section 8 would not pay for the seven-day period the tenant lived there before the successful inspection. The landlord informed the tenant that she would have to pay prorated rent and futilities for that period of time. The tenant paid her $10 toward the utilities. Section 8 began paying its portion of the rent in February 2009. In November 2009, the MHA again inspected the house. According to the landlord, there were minor problemsO— including electrical issues and a missing clothes rod — which she corrected. Section 8 paid for December 2009, but not January or February 2010 when the tenant was still living there. The tenant paid her portion or $120 for January 2010. The landlord informed the tenant that she was raising the rent to $550; the tenant refused to sign the new lease. The tenant attempted to continue paying her share of the rent, but the MHA did not pay its share. The tenant finally returned the keys to the landlord on March 1, 2010. The landlord also testified that some walls in the house were damaged during the tenant’s occupancy; it cost $100 to repair them.

At the conclusion of the evidence, the judge found that the lease expired on January 15, 2010, but the tenant remained until March 1, 2010. When the house failed inspection, Section 8 did not pay the rent; the court concluded that during those periods, the tenant was entitled to either break the lease and leave the premises or pay the rent herself. However, she was not entitled to live there rent-free. By the court’s calculations, the tenant owed $112 in rent for January 2009, $60 for prorated utilities in January 172009, $380 in rent for January 2010, and $500 for rent in February 2010, or a total of $1,052. This amount was subject to a credit of $500 for the tenant’s unreturned deposit. Finding that the evidence was insufficient, the court made no award to the landlord for the alleged damage to the house by the tenant. Judgment was signed May 10, 2010; it rejected the tenant’s demands but awarded the landlord damages of $1,052, subject to a $500 credit for the tenant’s deposit.

The tenant, now represented by counsel, appeals.

LAW

A lease is a synallagmatic contract by which one party, the lessor, binds himself to give to the other party, the lessee, the use and enjoyment of a thing for a term in exchange for a rent that the lessee binds himself to pay. La. C.C. art.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 So. 3d 422, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 57, 2011 WL 228456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmillian-v-anderson-lactapp-2011.