Mortgage Underwriting & Realty Co. v. Bowles

150 F.2d 411, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2792
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 29, 1945
DocketNo. 176
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 150 F.2d 411 (Mortgage Underwriting & Realty Co. v. Bowles) 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
Mortgage Underwriting & Realty Co. v. Bowles, 150 F.2d 411, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2792 (eca 1945).

Opinion

LAWS, Judge.

This case involves a complaint against an order of the Regional Administrator of the Office of Price Administration reducing the rent of complainant’s apartment building in San Francisco, California. The building was not rented on March 1, 1942, the maximum rent date for the Area, nor during the two months ending on that date. Subsequent to the maximum rent date it was first rented on November 14, 1942, the agreed rental being $250 per month. Under Section 4(e) of the Regulation,1 this became the maximum rent.

On June 11, 1943, the Area Rent Director notified complainant that it was proposed, under the provisions of Section 5 (c) (1) of the Regulation,2 to decrease to $150 per month the maximum rent allowed to be charged. Complainant filed objections to the proposed reduction, but after consideration, the Area Rent Director is-, sued an order declaring $150 per month to be the rent generally prevailing in the Area for comparable accommodations and establishing that as the maximum rent for complainant’s accommodations. Application for review of this order was filed with the Regional Administrator, request being made for an oral hearing. The application for oral hearing was denied and upon consideration of the record, the application for review was denied. Complainant then filed a protest before the Administrator stating objections to the order reducing the rent and also challenging the validity of the Regulation. The protest was denied and then the complaint now pending before us was filed.

Throughout the proceedings before the Administrator and this Court complainant has attacxed the Administrator’s finding that $150 represented the rent prevailing on the maximum rent date for comparable accommodations. Complainant contends the Administrator considered buildings which were not fairly comparable to its building and failed to consider others which were. The Administrator considered evidence comparing the various properties with regard to location, condition, age, size and facilities available. He also considered the rents of the allegedly comparable accomodations which were in effect on the maximum rent date. However, the Administrator refused to consider evidence offered by complainant to the effect that on or about [413]*413the maximum rent date complainant received one or more offers to rent its property for $250 per month; that the cost of the property and its current value are in excess of $30,000; that it is subject to a bank loan of $15,000; and that during the years 1933 and 1934, the depths of the Depression, the property rented for $200 per month for one year and $250 for the next; that when the property was purchased it was leased for $275 and at no time except during the Depression was it leased or offered to be leased for less than $250. This evidence is relied upon to establish two points: first, that the property on the maximum rent date was reasonably worth a rental of $250 per month, and, second, that the Administrator necessarily erred in finding other properties renting at substantially lower figures were comparable to that of complainant. The Administrator’s position consistently has been that these alleged facts are immaterial to his determination of the rent prevailing for comparable accommodations, and it is clear from' the record that they were not given consideration by him.

For reasons more fully stated later in this opinion, we agree with the position of the Administrator that his obligation under the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix § 901 et seq., is not to fix for individual properties a rental which will yield a reasonable return on the value of the properties. Therefore, the facts offered by complainant to establish the reduced rent as unreasonable were properly rejected in the consideration by the Administrator.

As to the second point to which complainant maintains its evidence is relevant, it will be noted that the reduction of complainant’s rent was ordered pursuant to a provision of the Regulation which designates as the basis of adjustment the rent found by the Administrator to be generally prevailing in the Area for comparable housing accommodations on the maximum rent date. Seldom will two or more properties ever be found to be precisely the same in all respects. Therefore the prevailing rent for comparable accommodations can be ascertained only by consideration of innumerable differences which exist between properties, some tangible and some intangible. The Administrator’s task is to select accommodations most similar to the subject property and to evaluate the differences between those properties and between them and the subject property. In making his determination he should consider, as he did in the case before us, the physical characteristics of the buildings, their age, the kind and quality of building materials used, the sizes of rooms, the condition of repair, the locations and neighborhoods, and other such factors which experienced realtors are accustomed to considering in appraising real estate. Reputation, social attractiveness, exclusiveness of clientele and prestige are other considerations which may be strongly indicative of the rental values of properties.3 The history of the rents obtained for property and the financial investments which purchasers and lessees have been willing to make in it may also be important indications of the rent level in which a building is properly classified. If a building has historically rented at a figure substantially in excess of rents obtained for properties asserted to be comparable, this circumstance would appear to bear upon the comparative rental value of the properties. Over a long period in such a case the tenants in effect have established the properties as having different rental values. The explanation as to why the properties may have rented at such figures may be evident for ascertainable reasons, or it may not be, but the existence of such circumstances is in itself an important consideration in determining comparability. For the same reason firm offers to rent where accepted or rejected upon terms capable of definite appraisal; bank loans in the form of trusts or mortgages on the properties; and possibly sales values in the market are considerations which bear upon the comparability of properties for rental purposes. In a proceeding to determine the prevailing rentals of comparable housing accommodations, we therefore are of opinion that evidence of this character offered by complainant was relevant and if not explained or refuted well might be persuasive and that the Administrator committed error in not giving consideration to it

Under these circumstances this case must be remanded to the Administrator with directions to consider the evidence which he rejected as immaterial. In such [414]*414consideration, we do not decide what weight should be given to the evidence. This is for determination by the Administrator after giving it consideration in connection with other evidence adduced before him.

Complainant claims it was injured by the refusal of the Regional Administrator to grant an oral hearing of its case. This Court will only interfere with a decision of the Administrator in the matter of granting or refusing an oral hearing where it plainly appears there has been an abuse of discretion. We find no such abuse in this case. Apparently all relevant facts in support of complainant’s case may be fully submitted in written form.

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Bluebook (online)
150 F.2d 411, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mortgage-underwriting-realty-co-v-bowles-eca-1945.