Milbourne v. Swinton

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 30, 2025
DocketN24A-12-003 KMV
StatusPublished

This text of Milbourne v. Swinton (Milbourne v. Swinton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milbourne v. Swinton, (Del. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF DELAWARE IN AND FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY

DOUGLAS MILBOURNE and ) ORQUIDRA MILBOURNE, ) ) C.A. No. N24A-12-003 KMV Appellants, ) ) v. ) ) DERRICK SWINTON. ) ) Appellee.

Submitted: July 28, 2025 Decided: October 30, 2025

ORDER

Upon Appeal from the Decision of the Court of Common Pleas: AFFIRMED

Douglas Milbourne and Orquida Milbourne; Pro Se Plaintiff-Below/Appellant. Derrick Swinton; Pro Se Defendant-Below/Appellee.

VAVALA, J.

1 I. INTRODUCTION

Tenants of a residential rental property appeal from the Court of Common

Pleas’ entry of judgment against them in favor of the landlord in a dispute over back

rent, retention of security deposit, and maintenance costs. The tenants ask this Court

to reverse the lower court’s judgment awarding of back rent and maintenance costs

to the landlord and, instead, find the tenants are owed double their security deposit.

II. BACKGROUND

This case arises from a contractual dispute between a landlord and his tenants.

In January 2020, Douglas Milbourne (“Tenant”) and Orquida Milbourne (together,

“Tenants”) entered into a rental agreement (the “Lease Agreement”) with Derrick

Swinton (“Landlord”) to lease a home in Newark, Delaware (the “Property”).1 The

Lease Agreement was to commence on February 15, 2020 for one year, terminating

on February 14, 2021, at a rate of $2,250 per month plus a security deposit of the

same.2 Per the Lease Agreement, the Tenants received a $500 a month rent reduction

1 The facts are taken from the Court of Common Pleas December 2, 2024, Decision After Trial, Case No. CPU4-21-003798 [“Dec. at #”]. 2 Dec. at 4.

2 for the first six months of the lease in exchange for “mak[ing] minor cosmetic repairs

including resurfacing and staining the hardwood floors.”3

Tenants moved into the Property early in order to paint and complete cosmetic

repairs to the home.4 Landlord had the property professionally cleaned prior to the

Tenants’ early move in.5 Yet, during the initial months of the residency, “[a]lthough

the Property was in a clean and habitable condition, various conventional

maintenance needs arose” such as replacement of the dishwasher, fixing the faucets

in the main bathroom, removal of a tree, and resurfacing of the driveway with

blacktop.6 Landlord “was not inattentive to Tenants’ reported issues . . . and took

reasonable and appropriate steps” to remedy the problems.7

In November 2020, however, “[t]he routine maintenance inconveniences gave

way to a more significant issue . . . when the kitchen sink overflowed with grey

water.”8 After contacting Landlord about the issue, but before a plumber arrived to

address the problem, Tenant cleaned up the mess made by the overflow. The

plumber cleared the blockage and suggested an enzyme drain cleaner be used on a

3 Dec. at 4. 4 Id. 5 Id. 6 Id. at 4-5. 7 Id. at 4. 8 Id. at 5.

3 bi-monthly basis. The invoice totaled $400, which Tenant paid directly to the

plumber and was deducted from the following month’s rent.9 Unfortunately, the

same issue occurred again in January 2021 when “Landlord had the issue resolved

by a professional[,] but Tenant again took on the task of cleaning up the grey water

himself.”10 The invoice for the initial plumbing repair “note[d] that ‘water

restoration’ was needed to remedy the overflowed grey water, at an estimated cost

of $3,000,”11 but Tenant had already cleaned up the water. “[T]he invoice was

admitted [at trial] only for purposes of establishing that Tenant paid the plumber

$400 directly; Tenant failed to present a witness to testify as to the content of the

invoice and the meaning of ‘water restoration.’”12

Tenants also failed to resurface and re-stain the hardwood floors per the Lease

Agreement.13 Consequently, Landlord “hired a flooring company to sand and stain

the hardwood floors, for which [he] paid $1,610.”14

Tenants stopped making rent payments on January 15, 2021.15 But they

continued to reside at the Property until March 30, 2021, despite the Lease

9 Dec. at 5. 10 Id. 11 Dec. at 5, n.10. 12 Id. 13 Dec. at 4, 5. 14 Id. at 5-6. 15 Id. at 6.

4 Agreement terminating on February 14.16 When Tenants did vacate, the total back

rent owed was $5,625, comprised of the monthly rate of $2,250 plus the additional

45 days Tenants resided at the Property beyond the expiration of the Lease

Agreement at a prorated rate of $75 per day.17

A. The JP Court Action

Both parties initiated separate suits in the Justice of the Peace Court (the “JP

Court”) relating to their dispute18 that the JP Court consolidated.19 Tenants sought

$25,000 “for double their security deposit, tenant repairs, loss of personal

belongings, reimbursement of meals, and rent abatement for conditions of the rental

unit.”20 Tenants contended that, under 25 Del. C. § 5514(b),21 they were entitled to

double their deposit because Landlord did not deposit their security deposit into an

escrow account and instead used the funds to pay the mortgage on the property.22

16 Dec. at 6. 17 Id. Douglas Milbourne v. Derrick J Swinton, JP13-21-000714 (Feb. 11, 2021); Derrick Swinton v. 18

Douglas Milbourne and Orquida Milbourne, JP13-21-000770 (Feb. 16, 2021). 19 Dec. at n.2; JP13-21-000714. 20 Justice of the Peace Court No. 13, October 12, 2021, Notice of Judgment [“JP Judgment”]. 21 25 Del. C. § 5514(b) states in pertinent part: “Each security deposit shall be placed by the landlord in an escrow bank account in a federally insured banking institution with an office that accepts deposits within the State. Such account shall be designated as a security deposit account and shall not be used in the operation of any business by the landlord.” 22 JP Judgment.

5 Landlord filed a counterclaim “seeking rent, late fees, holdover rent, floor repair,

and damages totaling $12,167.50.”23

Trial was held in the JP Court on October 5, 2021.24 Tenants and Landlord

submitted in evidence, the Lease Agreement, flooring invoice, plumbing receipts,

various photographs of the property before, during and after tenancy, and repair

estimates and receipts.25 The JP Court found for Landlord on his counterclaim for

the unpaid rent from January 15, 2021 to March 30, 2021 in the amount of $5,625

and the cost to refinish the floors for $1,610.26 The JP Court further found that

Tenants were not owed double their security deposit because Landlord “substantially

complied with the requirements of [§ 5514(b)]” and because Landlord “timely

disclose[d] the location of the security deposit account and it was in a federally-

insured financial institution.”27 But, per the Lease Agreement, Tenants were owed

their security deposit back in the amount of $2,250.28

23 JP Judgment. 24 Id. 25 Id. 26 Id. 27 Id. 28 Id.

6 B. The Court of Common Pleas Appeal

The parties appealed the JP Court’s decision to the Court of Common Pleas

(“CCP”).29 Appeals from JP Court to CCP proceed to trial de novo.30 In advance of

trial, Landlord filed a motion for default judgment against Tenant Orquida

Milbourne that was granted by bench order on May 23, 2024, with damages to be

determined at trial.31 Tenants then filed the Motion to Prohibit Counterclaim

requesting Landlord be prohibited from filing or offering testimony at trial in support

of a counterclaim.32

Trial was held in CCP on September 30, 2024,33 during which the lower court

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Milbourne v. Swinton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milbourne-v-swinton-delsuperct-2025.