Panorama Residential Protective Ass'n v. Panorama Corp.

627 P.2d 121, 28 Wash. App. 923, 1981 Wash. App. LEXIS 2249
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 17, 1981
Docket4283-II
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 627 P.2d 121 (Panorama Residential Protective Ass'n v. Panorama Corp.) 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
Panorama Residential Protective Ass'n v. Panorama Corp., 627 P.2d 121, 28 Wash. App. 923, 1981 Wash. App. LEXIS 2249 (Wash. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

Reed, C.J.

Members of the Panorama Residential Protective Association, people who reside within the retirement community of Panorama City in Lacey, appeal from a summary judgment in their declaratory judgment action seeking to bar a rent surcharge intended by their landlord, the Panorama Corporation of Washington.

Plaintiffs have lived in Panorama City for varying lengths of time. They occupy their houses and apartments under lifetime leases that allow termination of tenancy, however, upon 90-days' written notice. 1 Periodic rent increases are determined, according to their leases, by reference to the Consumer Price Index (or "cost of living *925 index"—apparently treated by the parties as the same thing). Those plaintiffs who began living in Panorama City before 1971 are subject to two kinds of rent-adjustment clauses. One kind provides for biennial adjustments to reflect changes in the Consumer Price Index (CPI).

The sums due shall be adjusted by Panorama City, Inc. on the second anniversary of this Agreement and every two years thereafter in proportion to the change up or down in the cost of living index of the United States Bureau of Labor.

(Italics ours.) Some 226 plaintiffs signed leases with essentially this clause. Another kind of rent adjustment clause pertaining to a few of the pre-1971 plaintiff residents provided for annual cost of living adjustments:

The sums due shall be adjusted by Panorama Corporation on the first anniversary of this Agreement and every year thereafter in proportion to the change up or down in the cost of living index of the United States Bureau of Labor.

(Italics ours.)

The trial court, in certifying class action status for the lawsuit, designated these two groups of tenants as "shall" plaintiffs, i.e., those whose leases provide that their rent "shall" be adjusted with reference to the CPI.

In 1971—according to affidavits of the then-president and sales manager of the Panorama Corporation—the landlord faced the consequences of a recession in the local economy. There arose a severe slackening of interest in Panorama's rental units, and some residents moved out or threatened to do so because the low rents elsewhere in the area had made Panorama City's rates noncompetitive. As a result, on May 20, 1971, the president of Panorama Corporation sent a letter to all residents containing the following language:

Several weeks ago at our New Events Brunch, and on an individual basis, I discussed with you modifying our approach to assessing "cost of living" increases.
This matter was presented to Panorama Corporation's Board of Directors on April 28, 1971, and the decision *926 was reached that the "cost of living" would be based upon program cost only. Thus, from this date on, all "cost of living" adjustments will be made on this new basis. 2
In the past, as you will recall, the "cost of living" increase was computed by increasing your previous monthly base charge by the percentage increase in the National Cost of Living Index.
For all "cost of living" increases effective March 1, 1971, and thereafter, through November 30, 1971, the actual program costs for the previous year ending November 30, 1970, will be used as the basis for computing the "cost of living" increase. The Board of Directors of Panorama City feel that this is the most equitable method to assess the "cost of living" increase, as it is based on the cost of program services only.

At some time shortly after this letter was sent, the landlord began using lease forms providing in part that the rents

may be adjusted by Panorama Corporation on the first annual anniversary of this Agreement and every year thereafter by an amount not to exceed the proportional increase or decrease in the Consumer Price Index . . .

or, in some cases, that the Panorama Corporation "shall have the right" to so adjust the rents. A total of 76 of the plaintiffs signed leases of these two similar kinds, and they were categorized for class action purposes as the "may" plaintiffs—those whose rent "may" be adjusted with reference to the CPI.

During the 7 years following the 1971 notice, on the anniversary date for each resident, the landlord computed *927 the periodic rent increase on the "program cost" basis. 3 The rental increases for that period were generally less than they would have been had the CPI increase been applied to current rentals as anticipated under the lease.

In April of 1978, however, the corporation informed all residents as follows:

During the time you have been a resident of Panorama City, inflation has been one of the major problems for our country, for you as an individual, and for Panorama City.
Over the years we have tried to hold the line by not assessing you the total increase on your monthly charge that is called for in your residency agreement. . . .
We now find it necessary to bring your monthly charge up to the full amount agreed to in your contract. Your increase is $ per month and your new gross monthly charge will be $ per month.
This procedure will not alter your regular anniversary date. The change merely brings your monthly charge up to what it would have been at the time you received your last increase, had you been charged at the rate specified in the contract.
Your May billing will reflect this new cost. . . .

The corporation was not seeking to recapture the rent it could have collected during this 7-year period. Rather, it imposed a onetime surcharge, the effect of which was to bring the monthly charges to the level they would have been had they been computed under the residency agreements over the 7-year period.

A typical example in the record will illustrate the point. One of the residents whose rent was $300.50 in 1971, was paying rent of $438.10 in 1978 due to periodic increases under the "program cost" adjustment plan followed during that period. According to defendant's calculations, the resident would have been paying rent of $496.46 had the cost of living increase been computed during that time with ref *928 erence to the current rent. Therefore, the resident was billed a nonanniversary increase in rent of $58.36 to make up the difference, and the new figure of $496.46 was intended to become the base upon which future increases would be computed.

In their class action plaintiffs sought declaratory and injunctive relief preventing a return to rentals computed in accordance with the original formula. After a series of summary judgment motions, the trial court ruled as follows:

1.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
627 P.2d 121, 28 Wash. App. 923, 1981 Wash. App. LEXIS 2249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/panorama-residential-protective-assn-v-panorama-corp-washctapp-1981.