Narrows Real Estate, Inc., Resp/cross-app. v. Mdhr, Consumer Protection Div., App/cross-resp

199 Wash. App. 842
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 25, 2017
Docket47766-1-II
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 199 Wash. App. 842 (Narrows Real Estate, Inc., Resp/cross-app. v. Mdhr, Consumer Protection Div., App/cross-resp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Narrows Real Estate, Inc., Resp/cross-app. v. Mdhr, Consumer Protection Div., App/cross-resp, 199 Wash. App. 842 (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Lee, J.

¶1 Lucila Santiago filed a complaint with the Manufactured/Mobile Home Dispute Resolution Program (MHDRP), 1 complaining that her landlord, Narrows Real Estate, Inc., doing business as Rainier Vista Mobile Home Park (Rainier Vista), was overcharging her for the water utility. After an investigation, the MHDRP issued a notice of violation, finding that Rainier Vista had charged tenants more than the “actual utility costs” in violation of RCW 59.20.070(6) 2 and ordering Rainier Vista to reimburse the tenants $35,240.00—the difference between what the utility provider charged Rainier Vista for water and what Rainier Vista charged its tenants for water. Rainier Vista appealed to the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH). The OAH affirmed the finding that Rainier Vista had *847 violated RCW 59.20.070(6) on partial summary judgment, but imposed its own remedy by using a different reimbursement calculation that totaled $88,445.77. Rainier Vista appealed the OAH orders to the superior court, which affirmed that a RCW 59.20.070(6) violation had occurred but reversed the OAH’s remedy based on a different reimbursement calculation than that used by the MHDRP. Rainier Vista then appealed to this court the superior court’s order affirming the violation, and the MHDRP appealed the superior court’s reversal of the OAH’s remedy.

¶2 On appeal to this court, we are asked to determine: (1) the meaning of “actual utility costs” as it is used in RCW 59.20.070(6); (2) whether the MHDRP had authority to issue a notice of violation that included Rainier Vista’s violations with respect to tenants who had not filed a complaint; (3) whether Rainier Vista was denied due process during the MHDRP’s investigation and the OAH’s proceedings; and (4) whether the OAH exceeded its statutory authority when it imposed its own remedy by using a different reimbursement calculation than that used by the MHDRP in determining Rainier Vista’s excessive charges for water.

¶3 We hold that (1) the term “actual utility costs,” as it is used in RCW 59.20.070(6), prohibits a landlord from charging tenants a utility fee that exceeds the amount that the landlord can show was in fact charged by, or paid to, the utility provider for providing the utility; (2) the MHDRP had discretion to investigate complaints and is required to consider the impact of the complained-of violations on the entire community; and (3) Rainier Vista was not denied due process. However, we hold that the OAH exceeded its statutory authority when it imposed its own remedy by utilizing a different reimbursement calculation than that used by the MHDRP. Therefore, we affirm the OAH’s determination that Rainier Vista violated RCW 59.20-.070(6), but we reverse the OAH’s determination of the amount of the overcharge and remand for the OAH to *848 determine whether a preponderance of the evidence supports the MHDRP’s calculation of the overcharge.

FACTS

A. Background

¶4 Rainer Vista is a mobile home park in Olympia. Santiago rented one of the approximately 151 lots in Rainier Vista. The rental agreement between Rainier Vista and Santiago provided in pertinent part:

2. ADDITIONAL CHARGES. In addition to the monthly rental and any other charges or fees specified in this Agreement, Tenant agrees to pay to Landlord the following charges: Water Service

Admin. Record (AR) at 587; Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 592.

¶5 The city of Lacey (City) provided water to Rainier Vista. There was one water meter for the entire mobile home park that calculated the amount of water the City provided to Rainier Vista. The individual lots in Rainier Vista did not have their own water meters to measure the water use of the individual lots. Once the water from the City reached Rainier Vista, Rainier Vista used its own infrastructure to distribute the water to the tenants.

¶6 Rainier Vista charged tenants a monthly fee for “water service.” AR at 581. Rainier Vista calculated its “water service” charge for each lot based on the estimated occupancy 3 of each lot, the cost of the water from the City, and the estimated costs Rainier Vista incurred in getting the water to each lot. AR at 580-82. More specifically, Rainier Vista calculated the amount charged to each lot by first adding the amount the City charged for the water to costs Rainier Vista estimated it incurred in getting the *849 water to each lot, 4 then dividing that sum by the total number of occupants estimated to be in the park, and finally multiplying that fraction by the number of occupants estimated to reside at each lot.

B. The Complaint and MHDRP’S Decision

¶7 On June 29, 2011, Santiago filed her complaint against Rainier Vista with the MHDRR Santiago claimed that the water bills she received from Rainier Vista were excessive. AR at 948-51. The MHDRP conducted an investigation. The investigation found that

• in 2010, the City charged Rainier Vista $106,090.06 for the water the City provided; the same year, Rainier Vista charged its tenants $112,494.48 for the water service;
• in 2011, the City charged Rainier Vista $116,022.36 for the water the City provided; the same year, Rainier Vista charged its tenants $131,613.28 for the water service;
• in January through October of 2012, the City charged Rainier Vista $124,262.34 for the water the City provided; for the same months, Rainier Vista charged its tenants $137,507.00 for the water service.

CP at 32-33, 51-52. 5 Based on its investigation, the MHDRP concluded that Rainier Vista had overcharged its tenants by $35,240.00. The MHDRP calculated this amount based on the sum of each year’s differences between what the City charged Rainier Vista and what Rainier Vista charged its tenants.

¶8 The MHDRP issued a notice of violation. The notice of violation stated that Rainier Vista violated RCW 59.20- *850 .070(6) of the Manufactured/Mobile Home Landlord-Tenant Act (MHLTA) when it “charged tenants a utility fee in excess of the actual utility cost.” AR at 9.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 Wash. App. 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/narrows-real-estate-inc-respcross-app-v-mdhr-consumer-protection-washctapp-2017.