Parreco v. District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission

885 A.2d 327, 2005 WL 2778891
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 6, 2005
Docket03-AA-1488
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 885 A.2d 327 (Parreco v. District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parreco v. District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission, 885 A.2d 327, 2005 WL 2778891 (D.C. 2005).

Opinion

RUIZ, Associate Judge:

Petitioner challenges the decision of the District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission (“RHC”) affirming a determination by an examiner of the Office of Adjudication of the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs that invalidated petitioner’s rent increase for failure to give tenant the statutorily-required notice. The decision ordered a roll-back of the rent increase and imposed a fine of $1000 for an unlawful increase in rent. It also awarded the tenant reimbursement of two days’ rent for a period when tenant’s apartment had no heat, as well as a fine of $500 for petitioner’s failure have given the tenant this statutorily-required reduction in rent.

We agree with petitioner that the decision invalidating the rent increase and imposing a fine was based on an issue the tenant never raised and of which petitioner had no adequate notice. We also agree that required findings were not made to justify imposition of the second fine. Thus, we reverse and remand to the agency for further proceedings.

I.

Hughes Denver Akassy (not a party to this case) was a tenant in a rent-controlled apartment building operated by petitioner. 2 The tenant and petitioner had had an adversarial and litigious relationship for some time, characterized by the tenant’s chronic failure to pay rent, complaints against petitioner’s allegedly poor maintenance of the apartment budding, and frequent recourse to Landlord/Tenant Court. 3 In this latest round, the tenant filed a petition on January 14, 2002, with the Rental Accommodations and Conversion Division (“RACD”) of the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs, alleging that the landlord had imposed a discriminatory and retaliatory rent increase. The RACD uses a form petition on which tenants check off the nature of their complaint. In the section for “Complaints Involving Increases in Rent,” the tenant checked off the box stating that “[t]he rent ceding filed with the Rental Accommodations and Conversion Division for my ... unit[ ] is improper.” In the comment area for this section he wrote:

I am a victim of discrimination by my landlord since I kept complaining about the poor condition of my apartment. The rent is more higher [sic] than other tenants on my floor who moved on [sic] after me. My landlord try [sic] to have *330 me evicted by incre[a]sing my rent by more than 20% this month. My ceiling (and my rent) are too high for the poor condition my apartment offer [sic].

In the section for Miscellaneous Complaints, the tenant also checked the box indicating “[rjetaliatory action has been directed against me[] by my[] Housing Provider ... for exercising [my] rights in violation of section 502 of the Rental Housing Emergency Act of 1985.” In the comment area for Miscellaneous Complaints, he wrote, “and now [the landlord has] increased my rent from $879 to $1050,” and alleged that the rent increase was in retaliation for the tenant’s complaints about the condition of his apartment and discriminated against him on the basis of his French African race and ethnicity. In the “Additional Space” section, the tenant complained that his rent was “too high,” that it was “improper,” “ridiculous,” and “a hostile judgment.” He reiterated his claim that the rent increase was retaliatory and discriminatory, and that it was simply a means to force his eviction.' Finally, in the “Services and/or Facilities” section, he complained that services had been either “permanently eliminated” or “substantially reduced” because he was without heat for two days in December 2001, his windows were broken, his wall paint was peeling, the radiator was loud, and the bathroom sink was broken.

In sum, the substance of the tenant’s stated reasons for objecting to the rent increase were that it was (1) in retaliation for complaining about the poor condition of the apartment; (2) motivated by racial and ethnic discrimination; and (3) unjustifiable, given the poor condition of the apartment. Important for this appeal, the tenant did not check the box provided on the form for claiming that “[t]he rent increase was larger than the amount of increase which was allowed by any applicable provision of the Rental Housing Emergency Act of 1985,” ie., higher than the rent ceiling, nor did he check the box claiming that “[a] proper .... notice of rent increase was not provided” to him by the landlord. Nowhere in the petition did the tenant specifically claim that the rent increase violated the rent control law or that he did not have adequate notice of the increase and the reasons for it. 4

An examiner of the Office of Adjudication of the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs held a hearing on July 16, 2002, where the tenant appeared pro se and the landlord appeared with counsel. Consistent with the RACD form petition filed by the tenant, the examiner stated that the issues raised by the tenant’s petition were whether the rent ceiling was too high given the poor quality of the facilities, and whether the rent increase was imper-missibly retaliatory. In his opening statement, the tenant reiterated his retaliation and discrimination claims, stating that the landlord increased his rent every six months, while he increased the rent for other tenants only annually. He did not claim that his notice of rent increase was deficient, or that the increase was in excess of that authorized by statute. In his case-in-chief, the tenant reiterated the majority of his opening statement and petition. He did not call any witnesses or introduce any documents into evidence. On cross-examination by landlord’s counsel, the tenant admitted that many of the problems of which he complained had long since been remedied, prior to the filing of *331 his petition. He denied, however, that the settlement agreement reached in an eviction proceeding required him to pay rent increases. See supra note 3.

In his opening statement, the landlord sought dismissal of the discrimination claim for lack of jurisdiction. Next, the landlord moved to dismiss any challenge to the rent increase on the basis that it was semiannual, because the law permits rent increases within 180 days of each other. The landlord then moved to dismiss the remainder of the tenant’s petition on grounds that the settlement agreement to stay the eviction that had been ordered by Superior Court required the tenant to pay all rent increases. The examiner took the motion under advisement, but did not rule on it, and ultimately reached the merits of the petition. On direct examination by his attorney, the landlord stated that he understood that he had the right to increase the tenant’s rent on a semi-annual basis, “within certain conditions of the law.” He testified that he had brought a number of eviction proceedings against the tenant because he had been chronically late in paying rent and at times did not pay rent at all. On cross-examination by the tenant, the landlord explained that he increased the tenant’s rent to offset the costs incurred in having to take legal action so often against the tenant to collect rent. The apartment building’s engineer also testified that the heat had been off only once, when the boiler unexpectedly broke down, but that it was fixed within five to six hours.

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Related

Wilson v. District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission
159 A.3d 1211 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2017)
Bernstein Management Corp. v. District of Columbia Rental Housing Commission
952 A.2d 190 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
885 A.2d 327, 2005 WL 2778891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parreco-v-district-of-columbia-rental-housing-commission-dc-2005.